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Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration Jun 7, 2021 5:30 PM - 6:15 PM EDT

Table of Contents I. ACTION ITEMS: A. Approval of the Minutes of the Meeting of May 3, 2021...... 2 B. POLICY CALENDAR: 1. RESOLUTION TO Approve the Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration Report...... 7 2. RESOLUTION TO Amend the Governance Plan of Hostos Community College at The City University of New York...... 44 3. RESOLUTION TO Appoint Linda Essig as Provost and Senior Vice President of Academic Affairs at Baruch College at The City University of New York.....76 4. RESOLUTION TO Appoint Teresa Bandosz as Distinguished Professor at The City College of The City University of New York...... 92 5. RESOLUTION TO Appoint Cecilia Maria Gonzalez-McHugh as Distinguished Professor at Queens College of The City University of New York...... 167 6. RESOLUTION TO Award Sofya Aptekar with Early Tenure at The School of Labor of The City University of New York with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2)...... 223 7. RESOLUTION TO Award Mary Theresa Kiely with Early Tenure at Queens College of The City University of New York with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2)...... 238 8. RESOLUTION TO Award Maaza Mengiste with Early Tenure at Queens College of The City University of New York with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2)...... 268 9. RESOLUTION TO Award Christian Parenti with Early Tenure at John Jay College of The City University of New York with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2)...... 284 10. RESOLUTION to Transfer Instructional Staff from the Department of Kinesiology to the Departments of Health and Nutrition Sciences, Biology and Secondary Education at Brooklyn College of The City University of New York...... 303 11. RESOLUTION to Extend The Period of the Chancellor’s Emergency Relief Fund to June 30, 2022...... 305 BOARD OF TRUSTEES THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

COMMITTEE ON MINUTES OF THE MEETING FACULTY, STAFF AND ADMINISTRATION MAY 3, 2021

The meeting was called to order by Secretary Gayle M. Horwitz at 6:00 p.m.

The following people were present:

Committee Members: Trustee Staff: Hon. Ken Sunshine, Vice Chair Senior Advisor to the Chancellor and Secretary Hon. Una S. T-Clarke (joined @ 6:09 p.m.) Gayle M. Horwitz Hon. Mayra Linares-Garcia General Counsel and Senior Vice Chancellor Derek Davis Faculty Member: Prof. Kerin Coughlin, faculty representative University Staff: Chancellor Félix V. Matos Rodriguez Student Member: Executive Vice Chancellor and University Provost Ms. Amber Rivero, student representative José Luis Cruz Executive Vice Chancellor and Chief Operating COP Liaison: Officer Hector Batista President Thomas A. Isekenegbe Senior Vice Chancellor and Special Counsel Glenda G. Grace Trustee Observer: Vice Chancellor Doriane K. Gloria Hon. Martin Burke Interim Vice Chancellor Andrea Shapiro Davis Assistant General Counsel Hilary Klein Observer: Executive Director of Benefits Matthew Manfredi Prof. Maureen Matarese, faculty alternate

Statement of Secretary Gayle M. Horwitz: “On March 7, 2020, Governor Cuomo issued Executive Order 202 declaring a State of Emergency in response to the COVID-19 outbreak. On March 13, 2020, Governor Cuomo issued Executive Order 202.1, which included a suspension of law allowing the attendance of meetings telephonically or other similar service.

Article 7 of the Public Officers Law, to the extent necessary to permit any public body to meet and take such actions authorized by the law without permitting in public in-person access to meetings and authorizing such meetings to be held remotely by conference call or similar service, provided that the public has the ability to view or listen to such proceeding and that such meetings are recorded and later transcribed.

In accordance with the Executive Order, this committee meeting is being held via videoconference with a live stream found at the CUNY Board of Trustees’ website. We are also testing out a new closed captioning feature which you will see on the bottom of your screen.

A copy of the calendar (agenda) is also available online at the CUNY Board of Trustees website. Additional items may be added during the meeting. As a reminder, please mute your audio so we can ensure that everyone can be heard.”

1 BOARD OF TRUSTEES THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

COMMITTEE ON MINUTES OF THE MEETING FACULTY, STAFF AND ADMINISTRATION MAY 3, 2021

The agenda items were considered and acted upon in the following order:

Secretary of the Board Horwitz stated, “Given that all Board members are participating remotely, I will announce the resolutions and ask for members to respond only if you would like to abstain or oppose an item, otherwise your vote will be recorded as a yes vote. If you are voting no or abstaining, please state your name and vote. Additionally, if you wish to second an item or have any questions, please state your name first for the record and let us avoid speaking over one another.”

I. ACTION ITEMS:

A. APPROVAL OF MINUTES OF THE MEETING OF MARCH 1, 2021. Moved by Committee Vice Chair Ken Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Mayra Linares-Garcia, the minutes were unanimously approved as submitted.

B. POLICY CALENDAR:

1. Resolution to Approve the Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration Report. Secretary of the Board Horwitz requested the approval of the Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) report.

Vice Chancellor Doriane Gloria stated, “The CFSA report reflects a total of 110 employee actions including, 60 fellowship leaves, 28 faculty appointments and reappointments with tenure, 11 acting or interim appointments, and nine resignations or transfers. We also have two additional appointments from Medgar Evers College, which will go to the full board agenda to be published next week.”

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Ms. Amber Rivero, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

2. Resolution to Implement Paid Family Leave Benefits for Members of the Executive Compensation Plan, Classified Managerial Staff and Other Non-Represented Employees. Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to implement Paid Family Leave benefits for members of the Executive Compensation Plan, Classified Managerial staff and other non-represented employees.

Vice Chancellor Gloria provided further background on the employee-funded insurance.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Linares-Garcia, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

3. Resolution to Amend the Governance Plan of Brooklyn College at The City University of New York. Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to amend the Governance Plan of Brooklyn College at The City University of New York.

Assistant General Counsel Hilary Klein provided further provided background on the amendment.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Linares-Garcia, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

2 BOARD OF TRUSTEES THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

COMMITTEE ON MINUTES OF THE MEETING FACULTY, STAFF AND ADMINISTRATION MAY 3, 2021

4. Resolution to Appoint David Gómez as Commissioner of the Civil Service System of The City University of New York. Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to appoint David Gómez as Commissioner of the Civil Service System of The City University of New York.

Vice Chancellor Gloria presented and highlighted the career success of David Gómez.

Chancellor Félix Matos Rodriguez stated, “I just want to thank President Gómez for always being a great CUNY citizen and accepting this role even in retirement.”

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Linares-Garcia, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

5. Resolution to Appoint Mohamed Attalla as Vice Chancellor for Facilities Planning, Construction and Management at The City University of New York. Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to appoint Mohamed Attalla as Vice Chancellor for Facilities Planning, Construction and Management at The City University of New York.

Vice Chancellor Gloria presented and highlighted the career success of Mohamed Attalla.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Linares-Garcia, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

6. Resolution to Name the Patty and Jay Baker Endowed Scholarship at Hunter College. Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to name the Patty and Jay Baker Endowed Scholarship at Hunter College.

Senior Vice Chancellor (SVC) and Special Counsel Glenda Grace provided further background on the naming.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Linares-Garcia, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

7. Resolution to Name the John Anthony Chardavoyne Endowed Scholarship at Eugenio María de Hostos Community College. Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to name the John Anthony Chardavoyne Endowed Scholarship at Eugenio María de Hostos Community College.

SVC and Special Counsel Glenda Grace provided further background on the naming.

Committee Vice Chair Sunshine stated, “It's good to see a contribution to Hostos.”

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Una Clarke, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

8. Resolution to Accept a Grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation for the Chancellor’s Emergency Relief Fund. Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to accept a grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation for The Chancellor's Emergency Relief Fund.

SVC and Special Counsel Glenda Grace provided further background on the gift.

3 BOARD OF TRUSTEES THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

COMMITTEE ON MINUTES OF THE MEETING FACULTY, STAFF AND ADMINISTRATION MAY 3, 2021

Chancellor Félix Matos Rodriguez stated, “Thanks, Andrea Shapiro Davis for her hard work in making this gift possible, teamwork in getting all this funding for students. I believe that with this donation, we either hit or are very close to the $10 million mark in getting funds for our students to support them during the pandemics, so great team effort, and I want to commend everybody. And, we want to get that money in so we can get the money out quickly to our students.”

SVC and Special Counsel Glenda Grace confirmed that the University did exceed the $10 million mark in fund with this gift.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Linares-Garcia, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

9. Resolution to Appoint Yiannis Andreopoulos as Distinguished Professor at the City College of The City University of New York. Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to appoint Yiannis Andreopoulos as Distinguished Professor at City College of The City University of New York.

Executive Vice Chancellor and University Provost (EVC&UP) José Luis Cruz presented and highlighted the career success of Yiannis Andreopoulos.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Clarke, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

10. Resolution to Appoint Hernan Makse as Distinguished Professor at the City College of The City University of New York. Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to appoint Hernan Makse as Distinguished Professor at City College of The City University of New York.

EVC&UP Cruz presented and highlighted the career success of Hernan Makse.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Clarke, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

11. Resolution to Award Dr. Lesia Ruglass with Early Tenure at The City College of New York with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2). Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to award Dr. Lesia Ruglass with Early Tenure at The City College of New York with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2).

EVC&UP Cruz presented and highlighted the career success of Dr. Lesia Ruglass followed by additional details from Provost and Sr. Vice President of Academic Affairs at City College Tony Liss.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Clarke, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

12. Resolution to Award Matthew Sfeir with Early Tenure at The Graduate Center of The City University of New York with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2). Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to award Matthew Sfeir with Early Tenure at The Graduate Center of The City University of New York with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2).

4 BOARD OF TRUSTEES THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

COMMITTEE ON MINUTES OF THE MEETING FACULTY, STAFF AND ADMINISTRATION MAY 3, 2021

EVC&UP Cruz presented and highlighted the career success of Matthew Sfeir followed by additional details from President Robin Garrell.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Clarke, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

13. Resolution to Award Jama Shelton with Early Tenure at the Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2). Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to award Jama Shelton Early Tenure at the Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2).

EVC&UP Cruz presented and highlighted the career success of Jama Shelton followed by additional details from President Jennifer Raab.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Clarke, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

14. Resolution to Award Michaela Soyer with Early Tenure at Hunter College with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2). Secretary of the Board Horwitz asked for the Committee’s approval to award Michaela Soyer Early Tenure at Hunter College with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2).

EVC&UP Cruz presented and highlighted the career success of Jama Shelton followed by additional details from President Jennifer Raab.

Moved by Committee Vice Chair Sunshine and seconded by Trustee Clarke, and following discussion, the item was unanimously approved for submission to the Board.

Ms. Rivero inquired, “Is this the committee that does the final oversight over these ten- year appointments? And if so, are we tracking how often, and this is not, to subject to this person's validity about their ten-year appointment, but just in general I want to know do we have or are we tracking oversight on how often ten-year appointment, full-time faculty appointments, and reappointments are going to minoritized individuals and if there's equity in these appointments across the University?” EVC&UP Cruz responded, “The answer is yes. Through a collaboration between the Office of Academic Affairs and the Office of Human Resources, we do track the underutilization of different groups, both through our recruitment, retention, tenure, and promotion processes. And those data inform our equity and diversity programs.”

Committee Vice Chair Sunshine moved to adjourn the meeting. The motion was seconded by Trustee Linares-Garcia and the meeting was adjourned at 6:32 p.m.

5

Board of Trustees of The City University of New York

RESOLUTION TO Approve the Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration Report

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, The colleges and University central office appoint faculty, executives, and staff to ensure academic and administrative operations continue seamlessly and new initiatives are implemented effectively; and

WHEREAS, Faculty are evaluated and reappointed on a systematic basis, sometimes resulting in the awarding of tenure, in order to retain superior faculty; and

WHEREAS, Faculty are granted fellowship leave in order to conduct research, improve their teaching, or conduct creative work, thereby improving the students’ experience and university’s success; and`

WHEREAS, Other personnel actions, including executive level appointments, appointments named chair, appointments waiving bylaws requirements, and appointments with 211 waivers and 212 notices, are considered as appropriate to guarantee University and campus goals and commitments are achieved; and

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

RESOLVED, That the CFSA Report prepared by the Office of Human Resources Management and presented, be approved effective June 28, 2021. I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Baruch College Fellowship Leave - Half Year N P Loomba Dept of Mgt Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Thompson,Cynthia Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 @ 100%.

The City University of New York Page 1 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Borough of Manhattan CC Appointment office of Academic Affairs Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Dn Acad Affairs Dean Barnet,David ECP Base Sal $155,000.00 5/17/2021 5/16/2022 Interim

Acting >=6 Mo Or Prior Ben

Fellowship Leave - Full Year Academic Literacy & Linguistic Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Comeau-Kirschner,Ch Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 8/25/2021 8/24/2022 Fellowship Leave: eryl Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @80% pay..

Title Change - ECP office of Academic Affairs Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Dn Acad Assc Dean Zummo,Janice ECP (Not Base Sal $148,495.00 4/19/2021

Affairs Acting)

The City University of New York Page 2 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Bronx CC Fellowship Leave - Full Year English Language & Literature Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Lecturer Lecturer DiSalvo,Frances CCE Base Sal $86,050.00 8/25/2021 8/24/2022 Full Year Certificate Fellowship Leave Continuou @ 80% Pay (Fall s Emp 2021-Spring 2022)

History Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Reid,Ahmed Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 8/25/2021 8/24/2022 Full Year Fellowship Leave @ 80 Pay (Fall 2021-Spring 2022)

Math & Computer Sciences Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor O'Sullivan,Cormac Tenured Base Sal $121,852.00 8/25/2021 8/24/2022 Full Year Fellowship Leave @ 80% Pay (Fall 2021-Spring 2022)

The City University of New York Page 3 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

CUNY GradSch ofPub H and H Pol Fellowship Leave - Full Year Epidemiology and Biostatistics Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Distinguished Dist Professor Borrell,Luisa Instructors Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 8/31/2021 Fellowship Leave Professor and others Fall 2021 & Spring PSC 2022 @ 80%. SAB $44,655.00 8/25/2021 8/31/2021 Stipend(D) $28,594.00 8/25/2021 8/31/2021

Assc Professor Assc Professor Wyka,Katarzyna Tenured Base Sal $98,056.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2020 & Fall 2021 @ 80%.

Health Policy and Management Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Huang,Terry Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Fall 2022 @ 80%. SAB $73,102.00 8/25/2021

Fellowship Leave - Half Year Com Health and Social Sciences Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Lecturer Doc Sch Lecturer Doct Sch Costa,Sergio CCE Base Sal $91,168.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Certificate Fall 2021 @ Continuou 100%.

s Emp

The City University of New York Page 4 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Reappointment Envirnmntl, OccuptNl & Geospl Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Pavilonis,Brian Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 SAB $3,121.00 9/1/2021

Health Policy and Management Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Cohen,Nevin Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 9/1/2021 SAB $21,098.00 9/1/2021

The City University of New York Page 5 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Central Office

VC For Human Resource Mgt Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Univ Asst VC Univ Asst VC Roy,Dona ECP Base Sal $165,000.00 5/15/2021

OHRM Acting >=6 Mo Or Prior Ben

The City University of New York Page 6 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Central Office Comm Colleges Appointment Academic Affairs Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Unknown - Univ Univ Asst Dean Castillo,Marisa ECP Base Sal $119,816.00 4/19/2021 4/18/2022 Interim

Asst Dean Acting >=6 Mo Or Prior Ben

The City University of New York Page 7 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

City College Fellowship Leave - Full Year Anthropolgy, Gen & Int Studies Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Thangaraj,Stanley Track Base Sal $94,542.00 8/25/2021 8/31/2021 Fellowship Leave Tenure Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Architecture, Department Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Edmiston,Jeremy Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Assc Professor Assc Professor Leadon,Francis Tenured Base Sal $104,260.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Assc Professor Assc Professor Llonch,Fabian Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Assc Professor Assc Professor Weiss,Sean Tenured Base Sal $91,030.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 8 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Art Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes College Lab College Lab Tech Abu Shaheen,Manal Tenured Base Sal $70,137.00 1/28/2022 Fellowship Leave Tech-Class Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80% Base Sal $70,137.00 8/25/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80%

Assc Professor Assc Professor Aitken,Molly Tenured Base Sal $104,260.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Lecturer Lecturer Beckwith,Patterson CCE Base Sal $86,050.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Certificate Fall 2021 & Spring Continuou 2022 @ 80%

s Emp

Asst Professor Asst Professor Fuentes,Leopoldo Tenured Base Sal $93,791.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

College Lab College Lab Tech Harrington Tenured Base Sal $70,137.00 1/28/2022 Fellowship Leave Tech-Class Rutter,Andrew Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80% Base Sal $70,137.00 8/25/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80%

Biology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Emerson,Mark Tenured Base Sal $98,056.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Professor Professor Janakiraman,Anuradh Tenured Base Sal $121,852.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave a Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 9 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Chemistry and Biochemistry Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Bandosz,Teresa Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Civil Engineering Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Yazdanbakhsh,Ardava Tenured Base Sal $101,572.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave n Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Classical & Modern Lang & Lit Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Kamal,Amr Tenured Base Sal $98,056.00 1/28/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80% Base Sal $98,056.00 8/25/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80%

Professor Professor Riobo,Carlos Tenured Base Sal $121,852.00 1/28/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80% Base Sal $121,852.00 8/25/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80%

Professor Professor Roberts,Jennifer Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 10 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Computer Science Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Gladkova,Irina Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Dean of InterDisc Studies Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Professor Asst Professor Matthews,Elizabeth Track Base Sal $93,791.00 8/25/2021 8/24/2022 Fellowship Leave Tenure Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Earth And Atmospheric Sciences Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Tzortziou,Maria Tenured Base Sal $121,852.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Assc Professor Assc Professor Wang,Zhengrong Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Economics and Business Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Chow,Peter Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 11 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

English Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Lecturer Doc Sch Lecturer Doct Sch Barkin,Doris CCE Base Sal $91,168.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Certificate Fall 2021 & Spring Continuou 2022 @ 80%

s Emp

Lecturer Lecturer Drabik,Grazyna CCE Base Sal $86,050.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Certificate Fall 2021 & Spring Continuou 2022 @ 80%

s Emp

Professor Professor Mazzola,Elizabeth Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Asst Professor Asst Professor Watson,Melissa Track Base Sal $87,762.00 8/25/2021 8/31/2021 Fellowship Leave Tenure Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

History Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Naddeo,Barbara Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Learning, Leadership & Culture Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Professor Asst Professor Huang,Carol Tenured Base Sal $93,791.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Assc Professor Assc Professor Kleyn,Tatyana Tenured Base Sal $104,260.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 12 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Library Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor-Librarian Professor Oscanlain,Seamus Tenured Base Sal $105,125.00 1/28/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80% Base Sal $105,125.00 8/25/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80%

Mathematics Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Kucherenko,Tamara Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Assc Professor Assc Professor Pignataro,Thea Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Mechanical Engineering Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Li,Jacqueline Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 13 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Media and Communications Arts Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Rassi,Babak Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Assc Professor Assc Professor Tibaldi,Antonio Tenured Base Sal $101,572.00 1/28/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80% Base Sal $101,572.00 8/25/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80%

Philosophy Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Weissman,David Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 1/28/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Spring 2023 @ 80% Base Sal $133,676.00 1/27/2023 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Spring 2023 @ 80%

Physics Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Shattuck,Mark Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 14 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Political Science Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Baver,Sherrie Tenured Base Sal $121,852.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Professor Professor Morgenstern,Mira Tenured Base Sal $121,852.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Psychology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Milstein,Glen Tenured Base Sal $104,260.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Distinguished Dist Professor Wachtel,Paul Instructors Base Sal $133,676.00 1/28/2022 8/31/2024 Fellowship Leave Professor and others Spring 2022 & Fall PSC 2022 @ 80% Stipend(D) $28,594.00 1/28/2022 8/31/2024 Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2022 8/31/2024 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 & Fall 2022 @ 80% Stipend(D) $28,594.00 8/25/2022 8/31/2024

Assc Professor Assc Professor Yali,Ann Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Sociology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Poros,Maritsa Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 15 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Teaching & Learning Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Falk,Beverly Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Theatre and Speech Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Lecturer Lecturer Judell,Brandon CCE Base Sal $86,050.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Certificate Fall 2021 & Spring Continuou 2022 @ 80%

s Emp

Fellowship Leave - Half Year Philosophy Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Crull,Elise Track Base Sal $94,542.00 8/25/2021 8/31/2021 Fellowship Leave Tenure Fall 2021 @ 100%

Reappointment Anthropolgy, Gen & Int Studies Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Thangaraj,Stanley Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Architecture, Department Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Aydogan,Ahu Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Assc Professor Assc Professor Birignani,Cesare Tenured Base Sal $88,099.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Assc Professor Assc Professor Melendez,Frank Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

The City University of New York Page 16 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Biology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Vuong,Bao Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Civil Engineering Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Allahviranloo,Mahdieh Tenured Base Sal $104,260.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Earth And Atmospheric Sciences Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Kidder,Steven Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

English Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Higney,Robert Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Asst Professor Asst Professor Watson,Melissa Tenured Base Sal $87,762.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Mathematics Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Chatterjee,Shirshendu Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Philosophy Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Crull,Elise Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Physics Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Ghaemi Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

Mohammadi,Pouyan

The City University of New York Page 17 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Political Science Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Smith,Nicholas Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021 Reappt w/Tenure

The City University of New York Page 18 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Craig Newmark Grad Schl Jrnlsm Appointment Graduate School Of Journalism Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Brown,Carrie Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Hire with Tenure effective fall semester, 8/25/2021 SAB $11,769.00 8/25/2021

The City University of New York Page 19 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Graduate Center Appointment Ph.D. Program In Anthropology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Ticktin,Miriam Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 7/1/2021 SAB $36,769.00 7/1/2021

Fellowship Leave - Full Year Library Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Assc Professor Handis,Michael Tenured Base Sal $111,011.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Professor-Librarian Fall 2021 and Spring 2022 @80%

Assc Assc Professor Sellie,Alycia Tenured Base Sal $98,056.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Professor-Librarian Fall 2021 and Spring 2022 @80%

Professor-Librarian Professor Thistlethwaite,Polly Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 20 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Ph.D. Program In Educ Psych Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Homer,Bruce Tenured Base Sal $121,852.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Fall 2021 and Spring 2022 @80%

Fellowship Leave - Half Year MA/Ph.D. Prgm in Philosophy Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Vasiliou,Iakovos Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 1/24/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 @ 100%

Ph.D. Program In Sociology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Kasinitz,Philip Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 1/24/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2022 @100% SAB $63,660.00 1/24/2022

No Salary Change-Reappointment Advanced Science Research Ctr Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Assc Professor Brown,Mason Tenured Base Sal $98,056.00 9/1/2021 Tenure effective Professor-Librarian 9/1/2021.

The City University of New York Page 21 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Transfer from Another College Ph.D. Program In French Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Koch,Erec Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Transfer with tenure from Hunter College

The City University of New York Page 22 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Hunter College No Salary Change-Reappointment Physical Therapy Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Silberman,Nicki Tenured Base Sal $94,542.00 9/1/2021

The City University of New York Page 23 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

John Jay College Appointment Public Management Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Morote,Elsa Sofia Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 9/1/2020

VP Student Affairs Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes VP Student Affairs Vice President Kerr,Brian ECP Base Sal $210,000.00 3/15/2021 3/14/2022 Interim

Acting >=6 Mo Or Prior Ben

The City University of New York Page 24 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Law School

Resignation Dean's Office - President Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Law Dn School of Dean Law School Bilek,Mary Lu ECP (Not Base Sal $278,000.00 3/29/2021

Law Acting)

The City University of New York Page 25 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Lehman College Fellowship Leave - Full Year Music, MM, Theatre, and Dance Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Watsonturner,Susan Tenured Base Sal $104,260.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Spring 2021 and Fall 2021 @ 80%

Physics And Astronomy Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Karabali,Dimitra Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Fellowship Leave Spring 2021 and Fall 2021 @ 80%

The City University of New York Page 26 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Medgar Evers College Appointment Dept Of Biology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Ramsey,Patricia Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 5/1/2021

Reappointment Dept Of Biology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Mujtaba,Syed Tenured Base Sal $104,260.00 9/1/2021

Dept Of English Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Chevalier,Victoria Tenured Base Sal $104,260.00 9/1/2021

Assc Professor Assc Professor Craig,Todd Tenured Base Sal $101,572.00 9/1/2021

Dept Of Library & Info Serv Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Schwartz,Judith Tenured Base Sal $101,572.00 9/1/2021

Dept of Public Administration Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Ford,Wallace Tenured Base Sal $101,572.00 9/1/2021

The City University of New York Page 27 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Nursing Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Professor Asst Professor Sterling-fox,Cynthia Tenured Base Sal $93,791.00 9/1/2021

College Lab College Lab Tech Turner,Janette Tenured Base Sal $65,508.00 9/1/2021

Tech-Class

The City University of New York Page 28 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

NYC College of Technology No Salary Change-Reappointment Architectural Technology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Anzalone,Phillip Tenured Base Sal $101,572.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Assc Professor Assc Professor Kim,Jihun Tenured Base Sal $91,030.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Biology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Blair,Christopher Tenured Base Sal $98,056.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Assc Professor Assc Professor Giannopoulou,Evgenia Tenured Base Sal $91,030.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Asst Professor Asst Professor Zahran,Mai Tenured Base Sal $85,162.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Business Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Professor Asst Professor Adomaitis,Alyssa Tenured Base Sal $93,791.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure SAB $5,746.00 9/1/2021

Career & Technical Ed Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Professor Asst Professor Teo,Hon Jie Tenured Base Sal $85,162.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

The City University of New York Page 29 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Construction Technology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Professor Asst Professor Allahverdi,Navid Tenured Base Sal $87,762.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

English Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Behrent,Megan Tenured Base Sal $91,030.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Asst Professor Asst Professor Ellis,Jason Tenured Base Sal $87,762.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Assc Professor Assc Professor Sears-Pigliucci,Jennife Tenured Base Sal $91,030.00 9/1/2021 This appointment r is with tenure

Environment Control Technology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Professor Asst Professor Kang,Daeho Tenured Base Sal $87,762.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Hospitality Management Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Professor Asst Professor Abreu,Rosa Tenured Base Sal $85,162.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Asst Professor Asst Professor Walljasper,Robert Tenured Base Sal $85,162.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Humanities Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Qian,Zhijian Tenured Base Sal $91,030.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

The City University of New York Page 30 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Law And Paralegal Studies Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Professor Asst Professor Coughlin,Kerin Tenured Base Sal $87,762.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Mathematics Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Singh,Satyanand Tenured Base Sal $101,572.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Social Science Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Almond,Amanda Tenured Base Sal $91,030.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Asst Professor Asst Professor Boyle,Stephanie Tenured Base Sal $87,762.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Assc Professor Assc Professor MacDougall,Daniel Tenured Base Sal $91,030.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

Assc Professor Assc Professor Mincyte,Diana Tenured Base Sal $101,572.00 9/1/2021 This appointment is with tenure

The City University of New York Page 31 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Queens College Fellowship Leave - Full Year English Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Sargent,Michael Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 1/29/2021 7/31/2021 Fellowship Leave Spring 2021 & Fall 2021 @ 80%

Linguistics & Commun Disorders Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Vago,Robert Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 1/29/2021 Fellowship Leave Spring 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80% Base Sal $133,676.00 1/28/2022 Fellowship Leave Spring 2021 & Spring 2022 @ 80%

Reappointment Anthropology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Rodriguez Tenured Base Sal $88,099.00 9/1/2021 Reappointment w/ Aponte,Juan Tenure

The City University of New York Page 32 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Art Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Smith,Ryan Tenured Base Sal $81,647.00 9/1/2021 Reappointment w/Tenure

Economics Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Taspinar,Suleyman Tenured Base Sal $104,260.00 9/1/2021 Reappointment w/Tenure

Family Nutrition/Exercise Sci Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Riina,Elizabeth Tenured Base Sal $88,099.00 9/1/2021 Reappointment w/ Tenure

The City University of New York Page 33 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Queensborough CC Appointment Business Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Francis,Leslie Tenured Base Sal $101,572.00 8/25/2021 Rescinded retirement

Professor Professor Rosa,James Tenured Base Sal $133,676.00 8/25/2021 Rescinded retirement

Resignation VP Student Affairs Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Asst Dn Enroll Mgt Asst Dean Evangelou,Linda ECP (Not Base Sal $130,000.00 5/8/2021

Acting)

The City University of New York Page 34 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

York College No Salary Change-Reappointment Biology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Bradbury-Boyd,Louis Tenured Base Sal $85,162.00 9/1/2021

Business and Economics Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Annansingh-Jamieson, Tenured Base Sal $91,030.00 9/1/2021

Fenio

Reappointment Accounting and Finance Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Amaghionyeodiwe,Llo Tenured Base Sal $98,056.00 9/1/2021

yd

Biology Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Emtage,Lesley Tenured Base Sal $85,162.00 9/1/2021

English Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Assc Professor Assc Professor Garley,Matthew Tenured Base Sal $85,162.00 9/1/2021 8/24/2022

The City University of New York Page 35 of 36 I-B-1 Committee on Faculty, Staff and Administration (CFSA) Report

June 2021

Performing & Fine Arts Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Hajikano,Maki Tenured Base Sal $98,056.00 9/1/2021

Assc Professor Assc Professor Sandoval de Tenured Base Sal $85,162.00 9/1/2021

Leon,Carlos

Assc Professor Assc Professor Tung,Larry Tenured Base Sal $85,162.00 9/1/2021

Termination-Executive VP Academic Affairs Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Sr VP Acad Aff and Sr Vice President Meleties,Panayiotis ECP (Not Base Sal $213,350.00 4/23/2021

Provost Acting)

Transfer to Another Department World Lang, Lit and Humanities Title Functional Title Name Type Pay Component Compensation Eff From Eff To Notes Professor Professor Gerena,Linda Tenured Base Sal $121,852.00 1/29/2021

The City University of New York Page 36 of 36

Board of Trustees of The City University of New York

RESOLUTION TO Amend the Charter of Governance of Eugenio María de Hostos Community College at The City University of New York

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, Hostos Community College’s (“Hostos”) Charter of Governance (“Charter”) was adopted by the Board of Trustees on September 30, 1992; and

WHEREAS, Hostos’ Charter has been amended several times by the Board of Trustees, most recently on May 10, 2018; and

WHEREAS, Hostos’ College Senate approved amendments to the Charter on April 18, 2019, May 16, 2019, September 19, 2019, October 17, 2019, November 21, 2019, December 19, 2019, February 20, 2020, April 23, 2020, April 15, 2021, and May 20, 2021; and

WHEREAS, All of those amendments are supported by the College President; and

WHEREAS, The proposed amendments are mainly technical amendments intended to clarify provisions of the Charter or conform the Charter to actual practice, and do not seek to make any substantial changes in the Charter’s governance structure; and

WHEREAS, The amendments include attendance requirements for Hostos representatives who are members of the University Faculty Senate (“UFS”) at UFS meetings and at College Senate committee meetings; and

WHEREAS, The amendments include notice of absence provisions to enable alternates to attend UFS and College Senate committee meetings; and

WHEREAS, The amendments clarify that the Academic Standards Committee will adjudicate grade appeals denied at the departmental level; and

WHEREAS, The amendments detail the responsibilities of the Committee on Affirmative Action, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, currently referred to in the Charter as the Affirmative Action Committee; and

WHEREAS, The amendments remove faculty representation from the Counseling Department, because counselors are now Higher Education Officers (“HEOS”) rather than faculty members, and are elected to the Senate as “HEOS”; and

WHEREAS, The amendments change the time period that regular elections for adjunct faculty members are held from May of each year to the period prior to the first College Senate meeting of the fall semester.

NOW, THEREFORE BE IT

RESOLVED, That the proposed amendments to Hostos’ Charter of Governance be adopted, effective June 28, 2021.

EXPLANATION: The proposed amendments to the Hostos Charter have been approved by the College’s governance body, the College Senate and they are recommended by the College President. Generally, the amendments make no major substantive changes to the Charter’s governance structure, and either eliminate outdated language or clarify existing provisions. In addition, the revisions impose attendance requirements for UFS representatives at UFS meetings (in addition to College Senate meetings) and College Senate committee meetings, as well as change the time period that elections for adjunct faculty members are held. The proposals also detail additional responsibilities for two committees: the Academic Standards Committee and the renamed Committee on Affirmative Action, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion.

First, the amendments create an expectation that Hostos representatives to the UFS will attend all UFS meetings. All UFS representatives who are full-time faculty members are automatically members of the Hostos College Senate, which also includes adjunct faculty, non-teaching instructional staff, students, and classified staff as voting members and certain administrators as ex-officio, non-voting members. There is already an expectation that these UFS representatives attend Hostos College Senate meetings, and this imposes that same expectation on meetings of the UFS. In addition, the UFS representatives would need to give notice of non-attendance so that alternates could attend in their stead, and they would lose their positions after three absences per academic year. Similarly, these representatives would be required to attend the meetings of College Senate committees to which they are appointed and they would have to give notice of non-attendance and would lose their seats for three absences per academic year.

Second, the amendments memorialize a current practice of the Academic Standards Committee, namely, adjudicating grade appeals that have been denied at the departmental level. They also revise the name of the current Affirmative Action Committee; the new committee, the Committee on Affirmative Action, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion would also have an expanded role, including the responsibility to make recommendations and provide information to the Senate and the college community regarding implementation of University affirmation action and equity policies.

Third, because counselors are now Higher Education Officers (“HEOs”), rather than faculty members (with one exception), the amendments remove the requirement to have faculty representatives who are counselors. HEO counselors are separately elected to represent HEOs in the College Senate.

Fourth, the amendments change the time period that regular elections for adjunct faculty members are held from May of each year to the period prior to the first College Senate meeting of the fall semester.

Finally, the amendments propose a number of language changes. Pronouns are changed to gender neutral pronouns, and other minor edits of language are suggested to clarify the Charter.

Eugenio María de Hostos Community College The City University of New York

CHARTER OF GOVERNANCE

Amendments were adopted by the CUNY Board of Trustees on May 9, 2018, effective May 10, 2018. Past amendments were approved in June 2014 and April 1995. The Charter of Governance was originally approved on September 30, 1992.

Eugenio María de Hostos Community College The City University of New York

CHARTER OF GOVERNANCE Effective May 10, 2018·

ARTICLE I: FUNCTIONS OF THE COLLEGE SENATE SECTION 1

The College Senate will, in consultation with the administration and other groups in the College, recommend policy on all College matters, except for those within the domain of the President or any other Officer of the College or The City University of New York, as set forth in the By-laws of the Board of Trustees. The Senate shall be specifically responsible for the formulation of academic policy and for consultative and advisory functions related to the programs, standards, and goals of the College.

The College Senate shall:

A. Undertake any course of action within its authority, to help achieve the mission of the College within the College community and The City University.

B. Serve in an advisory capacity and have representation on all committees established by the President, the Vice Presidents, and/or the Deans to further the mission of the College, especially Search Committees established by the College.

C. Have the power to formulate new policy recommendations and to review already existing ones in areas including but not limited to the following:

1. Awarding of degrees, honors and credits

2. Degree requirements

3. Development of curricula

______

·Amendments were adopted by the CUNY Board of Trustees on May 9, 2018, effective May 10, 2018. Past amendments were approved in June 2014 and April 1995. The Charter of Governance was originally approved on September 30, 1992.

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4. Development of new academic and student services programs (including interdisciplinary and exchange programs) and review of existing ones, as well as developing, reviewing, and implementing policies related to disabled students

5. Grading practices and standards

6. College Library

7. College admission procedures and requirements

8. Evaluation of faculty

9. Affirmative Action/504 Ccompliance, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

10. Budget and Finance

11. Grants

12. Facilities

13. Creating any standing, ad hoc, and special committees as it deems necessary

14. Proposing amendments to, and revisions of, the By-laws of the Board of Trustees

15. Recommending any other actions that the Senate may deem appropriate

D. Perform other functions including but not limited to participation in the search committees for Vice Presidents and all Deans.

SECTION 2 ATTENDANCE

A. Every member of the Senate undertakes the responsibility of attending Senate sessions. Members, who are absent more than three times per academic year without a reasonable explanation sent in writing to the Chairperson of the College Senate, will be removed from office and another representative shall be elected in their place.

B. All Senate and Senate committee meetings shall be conducted according to the latest edition of Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised to the extent the same does not conflict with the Open Meetings Law.

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ARTICLE II: MEMBERSHIP IN THE COLLEGE SENATE

SECTION 1 SENATE MEMBERSHIP

A. The Senate membership shall consist of representatives from the full-time faculty, adjunct faculty, non-teaching instructional staff, students, and classified staff (Gittlesons, campus peace officers, and maintenance).

B. In addition, there shall be ex-officio and non-voting members as specified herein.

SECTION 2 FULL-TIME FACULTY MEMBERSHIP

A. Whenever the term “faculty” is used in this article without further qualification, it refers to the full-time, non-adjunct faculty.

B. Senate members representing faculty must hold the rank of Professor, Associate Professor, Assistant Professor, Lecturer, or Instructor.

C. College departments shall be represented by one representative for each academic unit (where such units exist), who shall be nominated and elected by members of their units.

D. Departments without units (which for the purpose of representation on the Senate will include Counseling) shall be represented in proportion to their faculty members: one representative per every ten (10) faculty members or fraction thereof, who shall be elected by the members of their department.

E. There shall be faculty members At-large elected by general ballot according to the following ratio: one faculty member/alternate per every twenty (20) faculty members or fraction thereof. These shall be elected by the faculty in attendance at the Stated Meeting of the Faculty and Staff at the beginning of the academic year. Absent the scheduling of such meeting by the Office of the President by September 1st, the Executive Committee shall schedule said meeting during the month of September for the sole purpose of conducting this election.

F. Full-time faculty who are College representatives to the UFS are automatically members of the College Senate. They shall be elected according to the same procedures and criteria that apply to all other Senators. UFS Senators are expected to attend all UFS Plenary meetings, in addition to Hostos Senate meetings. UFS Senators must send an explanation to the Chairperson of the Hostos College Senate in case of absence from a UFS Plenary meeting. Three (3) absences per academic year without this written explanation will be considered an abandonment of the position and another representative shall be elected in their place. Having communicated with the Chairperson of the Hostos College Senate that they will be absent from a UFS Plenary meeting, the UFS Senator is also responsible for informing a duly elected Hostos UFS Alternate Senator of such absence so the latter can attend in their stead.

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G. The PSC Chapter Chairperson shall automatically be a member with full senatorial rights.

SECTION 3 NON-TEACHING INSTRUCTIONAL STAFF MEMBERSHIP

A. To be a member of the Senate representing the non-teaching instructional staff, a person must be in one of the following non-teaching instructional titles: College Laboratory Technician (CLT) or Higher Education Officer (HEO).

B. Each category mentioned above shall be represented in proportion to its membership: one representative per every fifteen (15) members or fraction thereof.

SECTION 4 CLASSIFIED STAFF

A. Gittlesons (civil service staff) shall have one (1) representative to the College Senate.

B. All other classified staff shall have one (1) representative to the College Senate.

SECTION 5 STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES

A. Student representation will constitute one (1) student for every four (4), or major fraction thereof, of the non-student voting members of the Senate. Student representatives will be elected as provided by the Student Government Organization Constitution. Additional representatives shall be elected according to procedures for the election of officers stipulated in the Student Government Organization Constitution.

B. Every student representative to the Senate must be certified by the Registrar's Office as being a Hostos Community College student in good academic standing.

SECTION 6 ADJUNCT FACULTY MEMBERSHIP

A. The adjunct faculty shall be represented in the Senate by two (2) members, who shall be elected by means of general ballot by and from among such faculty.

SECTION 7 EX-OFFICIO

Ex-Officio membership without a vote shall be: A.

The College Administration including:

1. The President or designee, and

2. The Vice Presidents, Deans, or designees;

B. The Chair of the HEO Organization; and

4

C. A Parliamentarian designated by the Executive Committee of the Senate, who is not a member of the Senate, but who will attend its meetings and rule on questions of procedure.

SECTION 8 ELECTION PROCEDURES AND TERMS OF OFFICE

A. Staff members and full-time faculty members shall serve for a period of three academic years.

B. Adjunct faculty members shall serve for a period of one academic year.

C. Student representatives shall serve for a period of one academic year.

D. The Elections Committee shall carry out all the necessary elections for the Senate.

E. All election results shall be determined by a majority of those voting. If necessary, additional balloting will be conducted with the name(s) of candidate(s) having the fewest votes eliminated to the point of having twice as many candidates as positions until the vacant positions are filled. Notification of the election results must be promulgated no later than one week after the close of elections.

F. The Chair and the Senate Executive Committee (together and none individually) may be removed from office by means of a petition signed by two-thirds of the members eligible to vote. Said petition is to be presented in a sealed envelope during a regularly scheduled meeting of the Senate to the Vice Chair or Secretary of the Executive Committee and turned over unread to the Senate Elections Committee meeting in emergency session and must be recorded in the official records of the Senate. Furthermore, it is to be verified by said committee at said meeting, and the committee is to provide for elections at the next regularly scheduled meeting of the (now) suspended Senate.

SECTION 9 TIME TABLE

A. For staff members and full-time faculty members:

1. Regular elections shall be conducted during the second week of classes following the Spring Recess of the third year of the current Senate.

2. Special elections for the remainder of the original term shall be held to fill any vacancies as they arise.

B. For adjunct faculty members:

1. Regular elections shall be conducted before the first Senate meeting of the Fall semester in May of each year, after academic appointments have been made for the Fall semester.

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2. If an elected adjunct faculty member fails to be reappointed to the College for the Spring semester, an election shall be held in December for his or hertheir replacement, who shall take membership in the Senate on the first day of the Spring semester and serve the remainder of the original term.

3. Special elections for the remainder of the original term shall be held to fill any other vacancies as they arise.

C. On the last meeting of the Spring semester, the Senate shall hold annual elections to nominate a pool of faculty representatives to serve on the Hostos Association, Auxiliary ServicesEnterprise Corporation, and Faculty Student Disciplinarye Ccommittees. These names will be forwarded to the President, who will appoint members to the committees/bodies from the list.

SECTION 10 ELECTIONS OF OFFICERS AND THE COMMITTEE ON COMMITTEES

A. The Senate Chairperson shall have faculty rank or faculty status.

B. The Senate Chairperson and all members of both the Executive Committee and the Committee on Committees shall be nominated and elected by simple majority at the first meeting of the newly elected Senate to be called by the outgoing chairperson.

SECTION 11 THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

1. The Executive Committee shall be composed of nine voting Senators: six (6) faculty, two (2) students, and one (1) member of the non-teaching instructional staff (HEOs or CLTs).

2. The Chairperson of the Senate will be the Chair of the Executive Committee and one of its nine members.

3. The Committee will elect a Vice Chairperson and, a Recording Secretary, and a Corresponding Secretary from among its members. The term of the Recording Secretary shall be one year.

4. Non-student members shall serve for three (3) years. Student members shall serve for one (1) year.

B. Functions of the Executive Committee:

1. To serve as liaison between the President of the College and the Senate.

2. To transact such business as may be necessary between meetings of the Senate.

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3. To exercise any further powers and duties that may be conferred upon it by the Senate.

4. To develop any procedures needed to implement any charge given to it and to review existing procedures when needed.

5. To create ad hoc committees after consultation with the Senate.

6. To meet at least once a month during the academic year and expedite Senate business.

7. To schedule regular and special Senate meetings, to determine what is appropriate Senate business, and to prepare agendas for such meetings.

C. Functions of the Officers:

1. Duties of the Chairperson shall include but not be limited to the following:

(a) To conduct elections for the membership of the Executive Committee and Committee on Committees.

(b) To preside at all meetings of the Senate and the Executive Committee.

(c) To initiate election procedures to fill all vacancies of the Senate.

(d) To make pro-temp appointments in the event of any Officer's absence.

(e) To represent the Senate at all academic and official functions.

(f) After consultation with the Executive Committee, to appoint Senators to represent the Senate in non-Senate Committees.

(f)(g) The distribution of minutes and agendas to appropriate committees of individuals.

2. The Vice Chair shall serve as Acting Chairperson in the absence of the Chairperson.

3. Duties of the Recording Secretary shall include:

(a) The taking of minutes of Senate and Executive Committee meetings and submitting them to the Chairperson and the Committee on Committees.

(b) Taking attendance at Executive Committee and Senate meetings.

(c) Maintaining records of all Senate Executive Committee proceedings.

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(d) Sending copies of all Senate Proceedings to the College Library.

4. Duties of the Corresponding Secretary shall include the distribution of minutes and agendas to appropriate committees or individuals.

ARTICLE III: SENATE MEETINGS

SECTION I REGULAR MEETINGS

A. The Senate shall hold regular meetings once a month during the academic year on the third Thursday of the month.

B. The notice of each monthly meeting shall include the agenda, together with a written statement regarding any policy matter to be presented at the meeting. Such documents shall be distributed to each Senator during the week prior to the meeting. Announcements of all Senate meetings shall be sent to the College-wide community and to the general public by press release one week prior to the meeting.

SECTION 2 PROCEDURES

A. The order of business at all meetings shall conform to the newest edition of Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised.

B. The Chairperson, in consultation with the Parliamentarian, shall decide on all questions of quorum and parliamentary procedure, unless it is otherwise stipulated in this Charter.

C. The hour of adjournment shall be specified on the agenda and adhered to and no binding resolutions, motions or general discussions shall be considered beyond that hour without the approval of 2/3 of the voting members present.

D. All votes shall be by secret ballot except for routine matters by unanimous consent. The ballots shall be recorded and available to the public upon request.

E. All senate meetings shall be open. Upon recognition by the Chair, all who attend the Senate meeting shall have the right to speak.

SECTION 3 MINUTES OF SENATE MEETINGS

The Recording Secretary will take and maintain minutes, which shall include attendance. A copy of the minutes of each meeting of the Senate shall be distributed to each of the members of the Senate at the same time that the notice of agenda of the meeting is distributed.

SECTION 4 SPECIAL MEETINGS

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A. These meetings may be called by the Executive Committee of the Senate or by any ten (10) Senators upon presentation to the Chairperson of a written and signed request for the meeting.

B. Agendas for special meetings shall be distributed with the notice of such meetings.

ARTICLE IV: COLLEGE STRUCTURE

SECTION 1 DEPARTMENTS/DISCIPLINES

A. The structure of Hostos Community College shall be composed of divisions, each headed by a Vice President. At present, the College consists of the divisions of:

1. Academic Affairs,

2. Administration and Finance,

3. Continuing Education and Workforce Development,

4. Institutional Advancement, and

5. Student Development and Enrollment Management.

When altering the function of these divisions, the President of the College shall first consult with the Senate.

B. The Division of Academic Affairs shall be comprised of Departments, Units, and Programs of Study.

C. Within the context of the academic structure, a Department is an administrative entity composed of a single discipline or related disciplines or Programs of Study grouped together to represent the shared interests of the represented Units. A Department may or may not have Units.

D. An Academic Unit is an administrative entity within an Academic Department; the Unit is responsible for instruction in a particular program, discipline, or related disciplines.

E. A Program of Study is an organized body of courses that lead to a Certificate or degree or another defined academic goal.

SECTION 2 RESPONSIBILITES OF THE SENATE

A. The Senate shall have the power to review proposals for, and recommend, the creation of new Academic Units and/or programs of study, the elimination of existing Academic

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Units or programs of study, and the transfer of Academic Units and/or Programs of Study from one Department to another.

B. The process to be followed for the implementation of such a proposal will be:

1. Presentation of proposal to the Department(s) that houses (and/or will house) the Academic Unit or Program, followed by a Departmental vote.

2. Presentation of the proposal for review to the appropriate Vice Presidents(s).

3. Presentation of the proposal to the Senate.

4. Senate vote and recommendation to the President of the College.

5. Approval by the President.

6. Transmission of the proposal by the President’s Office to the Board of Trustees, and the Board’s approval.

7. When a transfer of an Academic Unit or Program of Study or faculty is from one Department to another, both Departments must approve the transfer.

ARTICLE V: COLLEGE-WIDE PERSONNEL AND BUDGET COMMITTEE

SECTION 1 MEMBERSHIP OF PERSONNEL AND BUDGET COMMITTEE

The College-Wide Committee on Personnel and Budget shall be composed of the following members:

A. The President of the College;

B. The Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs;

C. All Department Chairpersons;

D. Four At-Large faculty members elected from and by qualified faculty. No At-Large representative shall be from the same unit as the Departmental Chairperson; and

E. The Vice President for Student Development and Enrollment Management.

SECTION 2 CHAIRPERSON

A. The President of the College shall serve as Chairperson of the College-Wide P & B; in his/hertheir absence, the Vice President for Academic Affairs shall serve as Chair.

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B. The Labor Designee and a senior member of the administration designated by the President of the College shall sit with the College-Wide P & B at the invitation of the President.

SECTION 3 EXCEPTIONS

A. Teaching Faculty members holding or released to serve in an administrative position within the College and not teaching at least one course of their regular load are not eligible to serve as At-Large representatives.

B. Vice Presidents, Deans, and senior administrators cannot serve as At-Large representatives to the P & B.

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SECTION 4 ELECTION OF AT-LARGE FACULTY

The selection and election of the four At-Large faculty representatives to the College-Wide P & B shall proceed as follows:

A. Each academic Department and the Division of Student Development and Enrollment Management shall nominate one candidate.

B. Such nomination shall occur at the time of Departmental elections.

C. All nominees must be tenured and hold professorial rank.

D. The names of all nominees will be submitted to the Elections Committee of the Senate, which will conduct the election with the assistance of the Division of Academic Affairs.

E. All faculty members with professorial ranks; lecturers (full-time) and instructors who have been reappointed on an annual salary basis for a third or later year of continuous full-time service; and tenured CLT's shall be eligible to vote in College-Wide At-large Faculty P & B elections.

F. All eligible voting members shall elect the four representatives by simple majority of valid votes cast.

G. In the event no candidates obtain a simple majority, a run-off election will be held. The two candidates with the fewest votes will be dropped.

H. These procedures shall be repeated until all four (4) At-Large candidates are elected.

I. There shall only be one (1) At-Large representative from any given Department at any time.

ARTICLE VI: ACADEMIC DEPARTMENTAL STRUCTURE

SECTION 1 DEPARTMENTS AND UNITS

The following shall constitute the College's Departments and Units (disciplines or programs) within Departments:

A. Allied Health Sciences Department

1. Dental Hygiene Unit

2. Radiologic Technology Unit

3. Nursing Unit

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B. Behavioral and Social Sciences Department

1. Behavioral Sciences Unit

2. Social Sciences Unit

3. Public Policy and Law Unit

C. Business Department

1. Business Management/Accounting Unit

2. Office Technology Unit

D. English Department

E. Education Department

1. Early ChildhoodTeacher Education Unit

2. Gerontology Unit

3. Physical Education Unit

4. Health Education Unit

F. Humanities Department

1. Black Studies Unit

2. Latin American and Caribbean Studies Unit

3. Modern Languages Unit

4. Visual and Performing Arts Unit

5. Media Design Unit

G. Language and Cognition Department

H. Library Department

I. Mathematics Department

J. Natural Sciences Department

1. Biology Unit

2. Physical Sciences Unit

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SECTION 2 DEPARTMENTAL CHAIRPERSONS

A. Each Department shall have a Chairperson (who may also serve as Unit Coordinator). In accordance with the By-laws, the Chairperson of the Library Department will be appointed by the President of the College.

B. All Chairpersons, except the Chairperson of the Library Department, shall be elected by secret ballot for a term of three years by a majority vote of all eligible voting members of the instructional staff in the Department.

C. In Departments other than the Library, all professorial ranks with tenure shall be eligible to run for Departmental Chairperson. Exceptions may be made only when a Chairperson without tenure is recruited from outside the College.

D. Voting shall take place during the first full week in May. There shall be discussion prior to the vote.

E. All professorial ranks (professors, associate professors, and assistant professors); lecturers (full-time) and instructors who have been reappointed on an annual salary basis for a third or later year of continuous full service; and tenured CLT's are eligible to vote in Departmental elections.

F. The duties of a Chairperson shall follow CUNY By-Laws definition, except as amended by this governance plan.

G. Duties of Department Chairperson

The Department Chairperson shall be the executive officer of his/hertheir Department and shall carry out the Department's policies as well as those of the faculty and the board that are related to it. He/sheThey shall:

1. Be responsible for Departmental records and preside at meetings of the Department.

2. Assign courses to and arrange programs of instructional staff members of the Department. (The execution of this duty may be delegated to the Unit Coordinators.)

3. Initiate Departmental policy and actions concerning the recruitment of faculty and other Departmental affairs subject to the powers delegated by these by-laws to the staff of the Department in regard to educational policy, and to the appropriate Departmental committees in the matter of promotions.

4. Represent the Department before the faculty and the Board.

5. Serve as chair of the Department’s Committee on Personnel and Budget.

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6. After receiving the tentative unit budgets, prepare the tentative Departmental budget, subject to the approval by the Department's Committee on Personnel and Budget. Transmit the tentative Departmental budget to the Vice President for Academic Affairs with his/hertheir own recommendations.

7. Arrange for careful observation and guidance of the department’s instructional staff members. This duty may be delegated by the Department Chairperson to the Unit Coordinator or to a tenured professorial member in accordance with the collective bargaining agreement.

8. Make a full report to the President and to the College-Wide Personnel and Budget Committee of the action taken by the Department Committee on Personnel and Budget when recommending an appointee for tenure.

9. Hold an annual evaluation conference with every member of the department, other than full professors, after observation and prepare a memorandum thereof. This duty may be assigned to a qualified member of the Departmental Committee on Personnel and Budget in accordance with the collective bargaining agreement. Tenured full professors may be evaluated.

10. Generally supervise and administer the department. The Chairperson may delegate some specific duties to the Unit Coordinators.

11. Hold Departmental meetings at least once a month.

12. Promote collegial relations and intradepartmental collaboration.

13. Represent all units within the Department and act as liaison for the Department and its units to other departments and units.

H. Acting Chairpersons

1. In case of a temporary vacancy, the Department will nominate candidates from a list of eligible faculty members coming from the Departmental P & B.

2. The name of the Departmental candidate for Acting Chairperson, voted on by the Department, shall be submitted to the President.

3. If the President should reject the candidate, the process will be repeated until a suitable candidate is selected.

SECTION 3 UNIT COORDINATORS

A. Each Unit shall have a Coordinator who shall be elected by that Unit for a three-year term.

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B. The election of Unit Coordinators shall take place following that of the Department Chairperson during the first full week of May.

C. All professorial ranks, tenured and untenured, and lecturers with Certificates of Continuous Employment shall be eligible to run for Unit Coordinators. The Department Chairperson may also be elected as a Coordinator. There can only be one (1) Coordinator who is untenured in any given department. Tenured CLT's can vote in this election.

D. Duties of Unit Coordinators

1. Unit Coordinators shall serve as the primary administrators for matters pertaining to their respective units.

2. Supervise the Unit's curriculum.

3. Assign courses to and arrange programs of instructional staff members of the Unit as delegated by the Department Chairperson.

4. Arrange for careful observation and guidance of the Unit instructional staff members in consultation with the Department Chairperson.

5. Prepare the tentative Unit budget.

6. Be responsible for the Unit’s records.

7. Disseminate information to and from staff members within the Unit.

8. Initiate action concerning the recruitment of Unit faculty as assigned by the Department Chairperson.

9. Represent the Unit in the Departmental P & B Committee.

10. Coordinate program accreditation (where applicable).

SECTION 4 DEPARTMENTAL PERSONNEL AND BUDGET COMMITTEE

A. All constituted Departments shall have a Departmental Personnel and Budget Committee (P & B) to review matters in their purview.

B. The membership of Departmental P & B shall consist of:

1. The Chairperson;

2. Unit Coordinators, where applicable;

3. In Departments with fewer than five (5) Units, where possible, there shall be five (5) members, except where the total full and part-time faculty exceeds fifty (50), in

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which case there shall be seven (7) members. At-Large faculty members shall be elected as needed in order to reach the required membership; only one of these may be untenured, which person may be a lecturer with a certificate of continuous employment;

4. In Departments with five (5) or more Units, the total membership of the P & B shall be to the nearest odd number, with the remaining positions to be elected At-Large. An untenured faculty member, who may be a lecturer with a certificate of continuous employment, can only be elected to this position if all coordinators are tenured; and

5. In Departments with two or more Units, no more than 60% of the membership of the Departmental P & B should come from one Unit.

C. Tenured CLT's within a Department are eligible to vote in Departmental P & B elections but cannot be candidates.

D. All At-Large members of the Departmental P & B shall be elected at the same time as all other Departmental elections are held, for a term of office of (3) years.

E. The functions of the Departmental Personnel and Budget Committee shall include but not be limited to:

1. Recommendations of all actions concerning initial appointments, reappointments, tenure, CCE, and promotions (except full professor).

2. Interviewing of all prospective faculty and instructional staff candidates for employment.

3. Approval of all actions concerning travel money allocations, Departmental budget, the Departmental plan for the year, and budget allocations to units within the department.

F. New units will get automatic representation in Departmental P & B Committees as soon as they have been formally approved by all appropriate governance structures.

ARTICLE VII: SENATE COMMITTEES

SECTION 1 STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE

The standing Committees of the Senate shall include but not be limited to the following:

A. The Committee on Committees

B. Academic Standards Committee

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C. Admission and Retention Committee

D. Affirmative Action Committee

E. Budget and Finance Committee

F. Committee on Disability Issues

G. Curriculum Committee

H. Elections Committee

I. Executive Committee

J. Facilities

K. Grants Committee

L. Institutional Research Committee

M. Instructional Evaluations Committee

N. Library Committee

O. Scholarship and Awards Committee

SECTION 2 RULES CONCERNING SENATE STANDING COMMITTEES

A. All Senate committees shall record and maintain minutes of their meetings and submit copies of them to the Executive Committee and the Committee on Committees.

B. All Senate standing committees shall follow the Charter as to their functions.

C. All Senate standing committees shall prepare annual summaries of their activities to be submitted to the Executive Committee no later than the last scheduled meeting of the Senate each academic year.

D. All Senate committees shall elect their own officers, with the understanding that ex- officio members shall not be eligible to run for office of any standing, ad hoc, or special committee.

E. Unless otherwise stipulated in the Charter or sanctioned by the Senate, each of the standing committees shall consist of not less than six (6) and not more than twelve (12) members.

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F. Unless otherwise stipulated, on each standing committee there will be two (2) student members and two (2) members representing the non-teaching instructional staff. Student members will serve for a term of one (1) year.

SECTION 3 ATTENDANCE AT STANDING COMMITTEES MEETINGS

Any member who is absent from three (3) times per academic year without an explanation sent in writing to the chairperson of their committee will be considered to have abandoned their position and another representative shall be appointed to their committee by the Committee on Committees—in cases in which the Committee on Committees appoints members—or by the relevant electing bodies in cases in which committee members are elected.meetings without written notification shall be asked to resign and will be replaced by the Committee on Committees.

SECTION 4 THE COMMITTEE ON COMMITTEES

A. Membership:

1. The Committee on Committees shall be composed of nine (9) Senate members, including two (2) student members and one (1) member from the non-teaching instructional staff, elected by the members of the Senate.

2. Student members will be elected every year at the first meeting of the Senate. Other members will be elected at the first meeting of each newly formed Senate.

B. Function:

1. To assign members from different College constituencies to the specific Senate standing committees before the second meeting of the Senate for the academic year.

2. To determine the number of members to be assigned to each committee, unless otherwise specified in the Charter of Governance.

3. To advise all Senate Committees in the development of internal operating procedures and to submit these procedures to the Senate for approval.

4. To consider and resolve issues relating to membership status and replacement of any committee member.

5. To disseminate information about opportunities for service on all standing and ad-hoc committees.

6. To maintain current lists of membership in all Senate Committees.

7. To maintain a file of the minutes of all Standing Committee meetings.

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SECTION 5 ACADEMIC STANDARDS COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

The membership of the Academic Standards Committee will be assigned by the Committee on Committees

B. Function:

It is the charge of the Academic Standards Committee to preserve and maintain the academic policy and procedures of the College. The Academic Standards Committee shall:

1. Recommend to the Senate policy regarding academic probation, attendance, graduation, honors, grading, and other issues related to academic standards.

2. Hold hearings on student appeals regarding academic dismissal. Appeals of dismissal shall be processed by the Office of the Dean of Students in collaboration with the Chairperson of the Academic Standards Committee. Specific procedures are outlined in detail in the Hostos Community College Catalog.

2.3. Adjudicate grade appeals that have been denied at the departmental level, and submit a change of grade on behalf of the student when necessary. Specific procedures are outlined in the Hostos Community College Catalog.

SECTION 6 ADMISSIONS AND RETENTION COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

Membership shall be determined by the Committee on Committees to include regular faculty and the following:

1. Director of Admissions and Recruitment

2. A representative from the Office of the Registrar

3. Vice President for Student Development and Enrollment Management

4. One Counselor

5. One Student representative

6. Two HEOs

B. Function:

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1. (a) To review and recommend to the Senate College-wide policies regarding admission and retention.

(b) To review and recommend to the Senate policies regarding the matriculation of non-degree students.

(c) To review and recommend to the Senate College-wide policies on the acceptance of external course work towards a Hostos Community College Associate’s Degree.

2. In consultation with all appropriate parties, to hear and act upon those student appeals that result from the policies set forth in the above areas.

3. To maintain liaison with University personnel responsible for developing or changing admission, matriculation, and transfer credit criteria on a University-wide basis, and to report any proposals for such changes to the Senate.

4. To maintain liaison with College and University personnel responsible for developing special programs that might affect admission and external course work policies.

5. To make recommendations to the Hostos Senate on ways to increase the recruitment of students and maximize the retention of students.

SECTION 7 AFFIRMATIVE ACTION COMMITTEECommittee on Affirmative Action, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

A. Membership:

1. Membership shall be determined by the Committee on Committees.

2. The Affirmative ActionChief Diversity Officer shall serve as an ex-

officio member.

2. B. Function:

1. To monitor and make recommendations to the Senate, and as directed by the Senate to the college’s Chief Diversity Officer and/or the college President, regarding implementation of University affirmative action and equity policies, including, but not limited to their implementation as concerns hiring, tenure and termination of employment, as well as any reporting regarding those matters.To advise and assist the College Affirmative Action Officer in the implementation of affirmative action regulations and policies at the College, including hiring, tenure and termination of employment.

2. To provide information and updates to the Senate on developments regarding affirmative action, equity, diversity and inclusion especially as concerns their

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relevance and application to the college or the university.To meet regularly with the President in matters concerning the progress of affirmative action

2.3. To provide information and conduct activities concerning affirmative action, equity, diversity, inclusion and related matters for the college community..

SECTION 8 BUDGET AND FINANCE COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

Membership will be chosen by the Committee on Committees.

B. Function:

To research, inform, and make recommendations to the Senate and the College community on financial and budgetary matters.

SECTION 9 COMMITTEE ON DISABILITY ISSUES

A. Membership:

1. Membership shall be determined by the Committee on Committees.

2. The Coordinator of Services for Students with Disabilities shall serve as an ex-officio member.

B. Function:

1. To review existing college policies and procedures related to disability and to recommend to appropriate college offices and governance entities changes in such policies and procedures for the purposes of:

(a) achieving institutional compliance with federal, state, and local laws regarding non-discrimination on the basis of disability; and

(b) recommending ways of eliminating all barriers that might hinder or even prevent the fullest functioning of individuals who are students and/or employees of the College.

2. To collaborate in the development and provision of educational activities regarding disability issues of importance to the College community.

SECTION 10 CURRICULUM COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

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1. The membership of the Curriculum Committee shall be composed of one tenured or CCE representative from each academic Department of the College, one (1) 13.3B HEO, and two (2) elected Student Senate representatives duly certified by the Vice President for Student Development and Enrollment Management.

2. The representatives shall be elected by each Department from its Curriculum Committee and by the Division of Student Development and Enrollment Management, and their names submitted to the Committee on Committees for final approval.

3. The Vice President for Academic Affairs or his/hertheir designee and the Registrar shall serve as ex-officio members.

B. Function:

The Curriculum Committee shall have the following duties:

1. To evaluate and recommend new courses in accordance with Board of Trustees guidelines.

2. To evaluate and recommend any modifications of current courses in the curriculum, including credits, hours, titles, course descriptions, language of instruction, prerequisites, co-requisites, etc.

3. To review and recommend approval of degree requirement and distribution requirements for existing departments.

4. To review and recommend approval of all Letters of Intent and final proposals for all degree and certificate programs.

5. To review Letters of Warning and apprise the Senate.

6. To recommend to the College Senate the creation of subcommittees as the need arises, to cover such areas as skills across the curriculum, program review, etc.

7. To present to the College Senate, for its approval, any items voted upon and recommended by the committee.

C. Charges of the College-Wide Curriculum Committee:

1. To establish and maintain the standards and integrity of the College curricula.

2. To review existing curricula periodically and recommend changes where appropriate.

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3. To encourage the development of new courses, concentrations, and programs consistent with the mission of the College by providing a College-wide forum for consideration of all new courses and program proposals.

4. To review all curriculum proposals for their conformity to the College mission and objectives of the Department.

5. To review and approve the final draft of the curricular offerings in the College Catalog.

6. To preserve the institutional history of the Committee by yearly submitting the minutes, records, and reports to the College Archives housed in the Library.

7. To make recommendations regarding all curriculum proposals, and to transmit all such recommendations to the Executive Committee of the College Senate and the College Senate at large.

SECTION 11 ELECTIONS COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

Membership will be chosen by the Committee on Committees.

B. Function:

1. To develop and recommend procedures for elections pertaining to the Senate that are otherwise not described in this Charter.

2. To implement those election procedures approved by the Senate.

SECTION 12 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

(For membership and functions, see Article II, Section 11.)

SECTION 13 FACILITIES COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

1. Membership to be determined by Committee on Committees.

2. The Director of Campus Facilities serves as an ex-officio member of this committee.

B. Function:

1. To assess and consult on whether existing College facilities are being utilized to optimal capacity.

2. To forecast future College needs in regard to facilities. 24

3. To recommend policy regarding utilization and allocation of existing space.

4. To make recommendations regarding acquisition of new space.

5. To investigate complaints regarding the improper use of facilities.

6. To report to the Senate on its findings.

SECTION 14 GRANTS COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

1. Membership to be determined by Committee on Committees.

2. The Grants Officer shall serve as an ex-officio member of this committee.

B. Function:

1. To review grant proposals at any stage at the request of the faculty.

2. May make suggestions for grants to be initiated at the college.

3. To inform the Senate as to the purpose and nature of all grants awarded to the College.

4. To provide leadership, encourage, promote, and support expanding grant opportunities on campus.

SECTION 15 INSTITUTIONAL RESEARCH COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

1. Membership to be determined by the Committee on Committees.

2. The committee will include an equal number of faculty members from Liberal Arts and Career Programs and one (1) faculty member from the Division of Student Development and Enrollment Management.

3.2. A representative from the Office of Institutional Research will be an ex-officio member.

B. Function:

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1. The committee will facilitate research bearing on College educational programs and retention. To that end, it will assist research conducted in the College in compliance with the provisions of the Committee on Human Subjects, request data on behalf of research projects, recommend that studies be undertaken, submit all recommendations for research to the full Senate for approval, and disseminate results to the College community.

2. The committee will collaborate with and serve as a resource for other committees.

3. The committee will regularly report its findings to the Senate.

SECTION 16 INSTRUCTIONAL EVALUATIONS COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

1. Membership to be determined by the Committee on Committees.

B. Function:

1. To develop procedures and instruments for the classroom observation of faculty members by peers.

2. To develop procedures and instruments for the student evaluation of faculty.

3. To review the student evaluation process and the tabulation of results, and make recommendations thereon.

4. To report to the Senate on the procedures and instruments.

SECTION 17 LIBRARY COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

1. Every academic Department shall select one of its members to serve on this committee. That member will then function as the liaison between his or hertheir Department and the Library. One of the members must be a member of the Library faculty.

2. The Chief Librarian shall serve as an ex-officio member of this committee.

B. Function:

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1. To evaluate current Library holdings and media services as they relate to the current and future needs of each Department, Unit, and Program.

2. To make recommendations.

3. To report to the Senate on the recommendations.

SECTION 18 SCHOLARSHIPS AND AWARDS COMMITTEE

A. Membership:

1. Membership to be determined by the Committee on Committees.

B. Function:

1. To serve as an in-house resource to individuals or groups.

2. To develop standard criteria for selection of candidates and recipients of scholarships and awards.

3. To determine the recipients of Hostos scholarships and prizes in accordance with established criteria.

4. To locate and obtain additional resources for scholarships and awards.

SECTION 19 AD HOC COMMITTEES

The Executive Committee of the Senate shall create ad hoc committees as the need arises, and shall delineate their functions and membership.

ARTICLE VIII: REVISION AND AMENDMENT PROCEDURES

Any modification of this Charter as presently accepted shall be made according to the following procedures:

SECTION 1

Motions to amend this Charter may be proposed by the Executive Committee or by the written petition of no fewer than ten (10) Senators.

SECTION 2

Such motions to amend must be discussed at two (2) consecutive meetings of the Senate before being brought to a vote.

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SECTION 3

Such motions must be approved by two-thirds (2/3) of the total membership of the Senate.

SECTION 4

Approved amendments shall be submitted to the President for approval and recommendation to the Board of Trustees.

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Linda Essig California State University, Los Angeles College of Arts and Letters 5151 State University Drive Los Angeles, CA 90032

SUMMARY: Experienced academic leader committed to access and excellence in higher education with expertise in strategic planning, student success, enrollment management, resource acquisition, crisis management, communications, faculty development, community engagement, cross-campus collaborations, and more.

EDUCATION: PhD - Public Administration and Public Policy, Arizona State University MFA - Design for Stage and Screen, New York University Tisch School of the Arts BFA - with honors in Design, New York University Tisch School of the Arts

LEADERSHIP POSITIONS:

Dean, College of Arts and Letters, California State University, Los Angeles, 2018-present Institutional Context: Cal State LA is an urban comprehensive university serving over 25,000 students, 70% of whom are from traditionally underrepresented groups. The College of Arts & Letters serves over 3600 majors and over 4000 FTEs in nine departments (Art; Communication Studies; English; Liberal Studies; Modern Languages and Literatures; Music; Philosophy; Television, Film, and Media Studies; and Theatre & Dance). The College also includes four research centers and the Ronald H. Silverman Fine Arts Gallery. Duties and Responsibilities: Leadership, advancement, strategic planning, student success, oversight of ~$20M budget, 117 tenured/ track faculty, over 180 lecturers, and 45 staff. Selected accomplishments: Vision and leadership: • Developed new mission and vision for the college through a six-month long visioning process with a variety of internal and external stakeholder groups. Defined new College strategic priorities and articulated College values as part of the process. • Shifted college culture away from ad hoc reactivity to a culture of planning, transparency, and accountability • Created a “students first” culture throughout the college • Created professional development opportunities for department chairs and faculty • Led college in swift transition to remote instruction in response to Covid pandemic Student Success: • Year-to-year increases in freshman retention from 78% to 84% in 2020 • Instituted data-driven enrollment management approach that reduced unmet course

Essig / CV 1 demand by 33% • Promote liberal arts employment outcomes through development of professional pathways programming including “Connect the Dots” alumni engagement activities • Initiated Dean’s Student Advisory Council Advancement and Resource Management • Corporate gifts • Private philanthropy • Foundation grants • Expansion of self-support (continuing education) programs • Created infrastructure to better support faculty grant-writing resulting in three-fold increase in submissions • Eliminated an inherited general fund structural deficit through enrollment planning Community Partnerships: • LA County Museum of Art Sculpture Loan Program • City of LA Department of Cultural Affairs teaching artist certificate program • Disney Animation diversity recruitment program • Boyle Heights Promesa/Mendez High School/Roosevelt High School Shared Governance • Member of the Provost’s Deans Council • Member of the Academic Senate • Member of ad hoc Enrollment Management Task Force • Facilitated faculty-led revision of College’s Faculty Governance Guidelines Communications: • Collaborative development of strategic communication plan for the college that included redesign of website, regular newsletters, graphic signature, et al. Process improvements: • Collaborated with resource manager to accurately project and then distribute SFR, FTES, and budget targets to department chairs prior to course scheduling • Created and supported a grant application management process resulting in significant increase in grant applications originating in the College • Created planning tools for chairs to streamline college operations

Director, School of Theatre and Film, Arizona State University, 2006-2010 (also Chair, Department of Theatre 2004-2005); Institutional Context: Arizona State University grew into the largest (by student headcount) public research university in the US during the period of my service. I was recruited by President Michael Crow to transform what was then a Department of Theatre into the School of Theatre and Film. Duties and Responsibilities: Leadership, advancement, curricular development, oversight of ~$5M budget, 42 tenured/ track faculty, over 8 staff. Artistic director of Herberger Mainstage theatre season. Selected Accomplishments: Vision and Leadership:

Essig / CV 2 • Led reorganization of the department as a school, tripling size of student body, almost doubling budget size, and increasing faculty numbers by half. • Built trust and transparency within the faculty and staff of the school • Diversified programming for Herberger Mainstage. Advancement and Resource Acquisition • Twenty-fold increase in contributed income 2004-2010. • Grantors include: Kauffman Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, Arizona Commission on the Arts, Tempe Cultural Affairs, and more Curriculum and Student Success • Co-created the BA in Film Production, laying the groundwork for the creation of an independent film school fifteen years later. • Led re-design of freshman student success course, “Introduction to Theatre and Film,” leading to year-over-year improvements in retention 2006-2011.

Director, Enterprise and Entrepreneurship Programs, Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, Arizona State University, 2015-2018. Institutional Context: The Pave Program in Arts Entrepreneurship created under my leadership while Director of the School of Theatre and Film became a unit of the Herberger Institute, reporting directly to its dean in 2015 and won the 2015 Excellence in Entrepreneurship Education Specialty Program Award from US Assn of Small Business and Entrepreneurship Duties and Responsibilities: • Collaboration with campus-wide Entrepreneurship @ ASU initiative • Fundraising and resource aquisition • Pave Arts Venture Incubator, launching over 36 student-led creative enterprises • Convening of biennial national symposium on arts entrepreneurship • Graduate Program Head, Master of Arts in Creative Enterprise and Cultural Leadership • Graduate Program Head, Master of Fine Arts Theatre concentration in Arts Entrepreneurship and Management

Previous appointments: Chair, UW-Madison Department of Theatre and Drama, 2002-2004 Director of University Theatre, UW-Madison, 2002 Design Area Head, UW-Madison Department of Theatre and Drama, 1990-2002

ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS: Evelyn Smith Professor, School of Film, Dance, and Theatre, Arizona State University, 2014-2017 Professor, School of Film, Dance, and Theatre, Arizona State University, 2004-2018. Professor Emerita, 2018-present. Faculty, Barrett, The Honors College, Arizona State University, 2004-2018 Affiliate Faculty, Arts Media Engineering/Institute for Studies in the Arts, ASU, 2004-2010; 2012 Professor of Lighting Design, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1999-2004 Associate Professor, Theatre and Drama, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1994-1999

Essig / CV 3 Assistant Professor, Theatre and Drama, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1988-1994 Visiting Artist, University of Michigan, 1995 Visiting Artist, DePaul University, 1990

EXTERNAL GRANTS RECEIVED (as faculty member): Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, $9,419 Artists Thrive funding for research assistant, 2017. Mellon Foundation, subcontracted through Alliance for the Arts in Research Universities (a2ru), $8,146 for a study, The Landscape of Arts Entrepreneurship in US Higher Education, 2016. Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, $34,600, Arts Entrepreneurship Fellowship (graduate research assistant for arts business education research and knowledge dissemination), 2014-2016. Arizona Commission on the Arts, $7,500 Arizona Arts Entrepreneur Toolkit Planning and Development, 2014 (via the inaugural Arizona Art Tank program). National Endowment for the Arts, co-PI with E. Johnson (PI), M. Fitzgerald, R. Mook, S. Woodson: $32,000 for At Home in the Desert: Youth Engagement with Place, 2012-2013. Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation: $4000 for guest artist director for production of Big Love, 2010. Kauffman Foundation for Entrepreneurship, co-PI with K. Loui (PI), E. Capaldi, J. Rosen, C. Callahan, B. Melnyk et al: $5,000,000 to ASU to support the University as Entrepreneur Initiative; $246,000 to support p.a.v.e., the Performing Arts Venture Experience 2006- 2011, now The Pave Program in Arts Entrepreneurship. Arizona Commission on the Arts: $3400 to support commissioning of new play for young audiences by Laurie Brooks, 2007-08. City of Tempe Cultural Affairs Arts Grant (co-PI with R. Rivera-Servera): $5200 to support Performance in the Borderlands community programming and residency of playwright Caridad Svich, 2006-2007. National Endowment for the Arts “Challenge America Grant”: Suzan-Lori Parks’ Venus and African Diaspora Performance. $10,000 to support production and national symposium, 2006. International Association of Lighting Designers: grant-in-kind of optics demonstration materials, 2005. Evjue Foundation: $10,000 to supplement activities of the 2003 Hansberry Visiting Professorship at UW-Madison. Ford Foundation: stewardship of $100,000 grant to the UW Foundation to support the Lorraine Hansberry Professorship in Dramatics Arts, 2003. James Moy, original grant recipient. Gilbert Hemsley Programs In Lighting Master Class Award: $1000 International Association of Lighting Designers Education Trust Fund: gift in kind of teaching materials for course #560, Lighting Design for Architecture, 2001. Gilbert Hemsley Internship in Lighting Master Class Award: $1000 Electronic Theatre Controls: gift-in-kind of $16,000 in control equipment for lighting lab, 1999. Honorary Member: Milwaukee Repertory Theatre, in recognition of contributions of "time, loyalty, and talent", 1993, 1994. IES Lighting Library Program: selected through a competitive application process to receive the complete IES Library and Handbooks. These materials are housed in the Reserves collection of UW-Madison Memorial Library, 1992.

Essig / CV 4 Acceptance and Scholarship Award (funded by the Lighting Research and Education Fund of the Lighting Research Institute): to attend IES 6th Annual Workshop for Teachers of Lighting, 1989.

CONTINUING EDUCATION/PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Mental Health First Aid, Cal State LA, 2019 Harvard Institute for Higher Education MLE (Management and Leadership in Higher Ed), 2008 Association for Theatre in Higher Education Leadership Institute, 2005 Illuminating Engineering Society Workshop for Teachers of Lighting, 1989 Graduate course work, Public Administration and Public Policy, ASU 2008-2014 ASU Online: Bootcamp for Teaching Online, 2015

PUBLICATIONS (single authored except where noted; *peer reviewed; +invited): Books: Creative Infrastructures: Artists, Money, and Entrepreneurial Action, in press with Intellect Books for 2021 publication. Essig, L. and Setlow, J. Lighting and the Design Idea, 3rd Edition, Cengage Learning, 2012. Lighting and the Design Idea, 2nd Edition Los Angeles: Wadsworth/Thomson. Significantly revised and expanded from previous edition, 2005. *The Speed of Light: Dialogues on Lighting Design and Technological Change; Portsmouth: Heinemann, 2002. *Lighting and the Design Idea. Fort Worth: Harcourt Brace, 1997. 238 pages; 138 black and white illustrations (85 by author) and 12 color (3 by author).

Book Chapters: + “n=1” in S. Woodson and T. Underiner (eds) Theatre, Performance, and Change. Palgrave MacMillan, 2017. *Hong-Jo, C., Essig, L., and Bridgstock, R. “The Enterprising Artist and the Arts Entrepreneur: Emergent pedagogies for new disciplinary habits of mind” in N. Chick (ed.) Exploring Signature Pedagogies II, Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing, 2011. +“Arden Fingerhut: A Unique Approach and Prolific Career” invited submission to B. Owen (ed.) Late and Great: American Designers 1960-2010, Broadway Press, 2010. +“John Gleason: Master Colorist and Master Teacher,” invited submission to B. Owen (ed.) Late and Great: American Designers 1960-2010, Broadway Press, 2010. +“A Primer on the History of Stage Lighting,” invited submission to Documenting: Lighting Design Performance Arts Resource #25 Theatre Library Association, 2007. Reprinted with revisions in Theatre Design & Technology, Spring 2016.

Articles: * “Value Creation and Evaluation in Arts Incubators: A Cross-case Analysis,” International Journal of Arts Management 20 (2), 2018. * “Same or Different: The ‘Arts Entrepreneurship’ and ‘Cultural Entrepreneurship’ Constructs in US and European Higher Education,” Cultural Trends, 2017. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09548963.2017.1323842.

Essig / CV 5 * “Means and Ends: A Theory Framework for Understanding Entrepreneurship in the U.S. Arts and Culture Sector,” Journal of Arts Management, Law and Society, 45 (4), 2015. Taylor, E.A., Bonin-Rodriguez, P., and Essig, L. “Perspectives on Arts Entrepreneurship, Part 1.” Artivate: A Journal of Entrepreneurship in the Arts 4 (1), 3-7, 2015. * “Arts Incubators: A Typology,” Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society 44(3), 169- 180, 2014. *“Ownership, Failure, And Experience: Goals And Evaluation Metrics Of University-Based Arts Venture Incubators,” Entrepreneurship Research Journal 4(1), pp. 117-135, 2014. *“Frameworks for Educating the Artist of the Future: Habits of Mind for Arts Entrepreneurship,” Artivate: A Journal of Entrepreneurship in the Arts 1 (2), 2013. + “Slow and Fast Learning in the Digital Age,” Symposium Magazine, August 2013. Beckman, G. and Essig, L. “Arts Entrepreneurship: A Conversation,” Artivate: A Journal of Entrepreneurship in the Arts 1(1), 2012. +“Teaching Theatre Students to Think Entrepreneurially,” Stage Directions 25(10), 2012. +Essig, L., Rodger, D., Smith, R.L., Tosti-Lane, D. “Thoughts from the Curators,” Theatre Design and Technology 47, (4), Fall 2011. *“Suffusing Entrepreneurship into Theatre Curricula” Theatre Topics, September, 2009. *“Stanley McCandless, Lighting History, and Me,” Theatre Topics, March, 2007. “On Their Shoulders: Women in Lighting Design,” Theatre Design and Technology, Fall 2005. “Three Hours in the Light: Experiencing the Work of James Turrell,” Theatre Design and Technology, Spring 2003. "…and the Market Decided: The Birth of DMX 512," Theatre Design and Technology, Winter 2000. “A Chorus Line Revisited - Legacies of Computerized Lighting Control” Theatre Design and Technology, Winter 1998. +"Lighting Applications for Visual Impact" Illuminating Engineering Society publication #ED100.7, 1999. (Significant expansion and revision of 1993 version). +"Lighting for Visual Impact" Illuminating Engineering Society publication #ED100.7, 1993.

Research reports: Essig, L. and Guevara, J. “A Landscape of Arts Entrepreneurship in US Higher Education,” Alliance for the Arts in Research Universities, 2017. DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.35204.73606 “Networking and Entrepreneurial Success: A Review of Literature,” Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, 2016. DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.35297.71525 Flanagan, M. and Essig, L. “Artist Professional Development Needs: Findings and recommendations from a survey of artists and organizations,” Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, 2016. DOI 10.13140/RG.2.1.2956.2003 Essig, L. and Flanagan, M. “How It’s Being Done: Arts Business Training Across the US,” Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, 2015. DOI 10.13140/RG.2.1.1252.8081

Book reviews: + “Should We Build It? Will They Come?” A review of Building for the Arts by Peter Frumkin and Ana Kolendo. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 2015. +The Disappearing Stage edited by Arnold Aronson, Theatre Design and Technology, Winter

Essig / CV 6 2013. +Architecture of the Night by Dietrich Neumann, Theatre Design and Technology, Spring 2003. +The Photometrics Handbook by Robert C. Mumm, Theatre Design and Technology, Fall 1998.

Popular press: “Thought Leader of the Week: Linda Essig,” LiveDesign online, August 29, 2019 “Open for Business,” American Theatre Magazine, January 2013 (extended interview). “Art students also need to develop their business skills to succeed,” The Phoenix Business Journal, September 14, 2007, p. 71 (Op-Ed). “I Wish I’d Thought of That: Linda Essig” in “Season Preview,” American Theatre, October 2007, p.64.

Published projects and drawings: Lampert-Greaux, Ellen "Ah! Summer Theatre in Utah – Linda Essig Designs Ah! Wilderness" Entertainment Design Magazine Online, October 2001. Project profile, photographs and sketches. Lampert-Greaux, Ellen "Happy Holidays" Lighting Dimensions Magazine, March 2001. Project profile of Wisconsin State Capitol color installation. Fingerhut, Arden Theatre: Choice in Action, New York: HarperCollins, 1995, color plate. Lighting Sketch for The Hairy Ape. Dorn, Dennis and Mark Shanda Drafting for The Theatre, Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1991, pp. 216-223. Light Plot, Section, and Hookup for Sweeney Todd. Theatre Design and Technology, Fall 1992. Production Photo of The Hairy Ape and Designer Profile. Theatre Crafts, April 1989. Light Plot for Driving Miss Daisy; drafting by Linda Essig, design by A. Fingerhut. Lighting Dimensions, January/February 1987. Project Profile of 4D Discotheque, Linda Essig, project manager.

EXHIBITIONS (Lighting designs): * Prague Quadrennial of Scenography Lighting design for Venus, Prague 2007. (international/juried); subsequent exhibition at National Performing Arts Convention, Denver 2008; USITT Annual Conference, Houston 2008. * World Stage Design Digital Exhibit Lighting design for Oxygen, Toronto, 2005. (international/juried) * USITT Design Expo '92, Lighting design sketches, drawings, and production photos for The Hairy Ape, 1992 (juried). + Shakespeare Designed and Realized, Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery, Cedar City, Utah, 1992. Lighting design sketches for King Lear.

(Selected) NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS: Readings from Creative Infrastructures. Rural Arts and Culture Research Conference, Rural Policy Research Institute, 2021. (invited; declined due to scheduling) “New. Not Normal.” University of Indiana Arts and Innovation Research Lab, virtual

Essig / CV 7 symposium, 2020. (invited) “Crisis of Compensation: A Critical Discussion of Fair Wages, Access, and Equity for Junior Professionals and Academics in Arts Administration,” panel presentation with Y. Jung and J. Taylor, AAAE, Madison, 2019. “Same or Different? The Development of the Cultural Entrepreneurship and Arts Entrepreneurship Constructs in Europe and the US,” juried paper, European Network of Cultural Management, Valencia and a2ru, Denver, 2016; AAAE, 2017 (revised). “The Landscape of Arts Entrepreneurship in US Higher Education,” pre-conference presentation, a2ru annual conference, Denver, 2016. “Arts Entrepreneurship: A Conversation about Practice and Education,” invited plenary with Ian David Moss, Association of Arts Administration Educators, Philadelphia 2016. “Nurturing Artist Entrepreneurs to be Drivers of Creative Economies,” invited presenter, Americans for the Arts annual convention, Chicago 2015 “Means and Ends: A Theoretical Framework for Understanding Entrepreneurship in the U.S. Arts and Culture Sector,” AIMAC Biennial Conference, Aix-en-Provence, 2015 “Effectual Entrepreneurship in the Experiential Classroom: The Case of SAM,” juried presentation, Society for Arts Entrepreneurship Education conference, Columbus, 2015 “Not about the Donuts: Designing and managing a theatre internship,” UISTT annual conference, Cincinnati, 2015. “Arts Incubators as Public Policy Tools: Outputs, Outcomes, and Policy Targets,” juried paper, Social Theory, Politics and Arts annual conference, Ottawa 2014 “Arts Venture Incubation as a Pedagogic Technique,” juried panel, Assn of Arts Administration Educators annual conference, Montreal 2014 “Arts Entrepreneurship Program Development,” juried panel, Assn of Arts Administration Educators annual conference, Montreal 2014 “Arts Incubators: A Typology of Forms and Foci,” juried paper, Social Theory, Politics, and Arts conference, Seattle 2013 “What Do We Mean When We Talk About Arts Entrepreneurship?” juried panel organizer and presenter, Assn of Arts Administration Educators annual conference, 2013 “Failure is a Necessary Condition: Evaluating the Success of University Arts Venture Incubators,” juried paper at USASBE annual conference, 2013. “Teaching Habits of Mind for Creative Entrepreneurship: Three Action-oriented Pedagogies,” juried presentation at Higher Education Creativity Conference, University of Sichuan, Chengdu, China, 2012. “Cognitive Combining in Heterogeneous Groups in the Arts Entrepreneurship Classroom,” invited presenter, US Association of Small Business and Entrepreneurship annual conference, New Orleans, 2012. “Will We Just Survive or Will We Thrive? The Challenge of Implementing Entrepreneurship in Theatre” invited panelist, ATHE annual conference, Los Angeles 2010 “The Great Chain of Pedagogy: Lighting Design Education 1960-2010,” invited panelist, USITT annual conference, Kansas City, 2010 “Entrepreneurship and the Theatre Designer,” invited panelist, USITT annual conference, Houston, 2008 "Women Lighting Designers: Statistics and Trend Analysis" invited presenter, USITT annual

Essig / CV 8 conference, Toronto, 2005 "The Aesthetics of Choosing Color," invited panelist, USITT annual conference - Toronto, 1999 “Publication in Technical Theatre,” invited panelist USITT annual conference - Pittsburgh, 1997 “Lighting Design Solutions for Repertory Theatre,” invited panelist USITT annual conference - Fort Worth, 1996. "Alternatives to the Light Lab for Visual Training," invited panelist USITT annual conference - Wichita, 1993. "Principles of Architectural Lighting Design for the Theatrical Lighting Designer," invited lecture, DePaul University, January 1989.

INVITED LECTURES & KEYNOTE PRESENTATIONS “Research and Publication for and by Arts Administrators,” invited presentation, Seattle University, 2015, 2016. “Lowering Barriers: Lessons Learned from US Arts Incubation Practices,” keynote address, first annual Creative Initiatives Conference, Tbilisi, Georgia, 2015. “Arts Entrepreneurship for Theatre Students and Faculty,” invited presentation, University of Indiana Department of Theatre and Dance, 2015 “Arts Incubator Research,” invited presentation, University of Indiana School of Public and Environmental Affairs program in Arts Administration, 2015 “Not About the Benjamins: Arts Entrepreneurship Research, Practice, and Education,” UW- Madison Arts Business Research Symposium, keynote address, 2014 “Arts Venture Incubators: A National Perspective” and “Arts Entrepreneurship Education: Universities to Communities,” invited presentations, Western States Arts Federation annual directors meeting, Scottsdale 2013 “Process Creativity and Product Creativity: Collaboration in Groups,” invited presentation, Beijing Normal University, 2013 “Habits of Mind for Creative Entrepreneurship: Three Action Oriented Pedagogies,” invited presentation, Beijing Normal University, 2013 “Experience Failure for a Change,” Tedx Phoenix, 2011 (live and webcast) “Education, Technology, and the Arts” and “Ethics, the Arts, and Public Policy,” Brown Symposium XXXIII, Southwestern University, 2011

CREATIVE ACTIVITY: Note: Selected materials related to creative activity as a lighting designer 1983-2004 are archived at the Wisconsin State Historical Society, Madison WI. Permalink: http://arcat.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=30490

SOCIALLY ENGAGED and EXTENSION SCHOLARSHIP: Blog, Creative Infrastructure: Thoughts and ideas about infrastructure for the arts. http://creativeinfrastructure.org. Master class, Strategy and Opportunity Recognition, Middelbury College MiddCORE Program, 2017 Master class, AZ Artsworker Entrepreneurial Native Artists, Heard Museum and Arizona Commission on the Arts, 2017.

Essig / CV 9 Master class, AZ Artsworker Entrepreneurial Artists, Tucson/Pima Arts Council and Arizona Commission on the Arts, 2016. Lead author. Arizona Arts Entrepreneur Toolkit. An eBook and collection of digital tools for use by individual artists and small arts organizations in Arizona. Produced by the Pave Program in Arts Entrepreneurship, lead author, 2014. Director of Evaluation and project co-director. Home in the Desert: Youth Engagement and Place, a collaborative partnership between ASU, South Mountain High School, Phoenix Boys and Girls Club, Mesa Boys and Girls Club, and Pine Council Girl Scouts. 2012-2013.

LIGHTING DESIGN PROFESSIONAL THEATRES 1985-2007: Cleveland Play House; Missouri Repertory Theatre; Utah Shakespearean Festival; Skylight Opera Theatre; Pioneer Theatre; Milwaukee Repertory Theatre; Northlight Theatre; Long Island Stage; Opera Delaware; LaMama ETC; Texas Opera Theatre; Actors Theatre of Phoenix; Milwaukee Chamber Theatre; Madison Repertory Theatre; The New Federal Theatre; ArtsForum; Westport Country Playhouse; Chautauqua Conservatory Theatre Company.

CREATIVE ACTIVITY - ARCHITECTURAL LIGHTING: Principal Consultant (founder/owner) Lighting Design Collaborative, 1996-2000. Domingo Gonzalez Design, Architectural Lighting Consultants, Design Associate, 1988. Kruger Associates: Design Associate, 1988. Project Manager, 1986.

CREATIVE ACTIVITY - SET DESIGN Broadway: Speed the Plow assistant set designer, 1988

CONSULTING Urban Land Institute and Pacoima Beautiful, Pacoima Arts Incubator Planning and Development, 2017. Arizona Commission on the Arts, “AZ ArtsWorker: Entrepreneurial Artist Workshop,” 2016. Phoenix Office of Arts and Culture, “Savvy: The Art of Administration,” 2015. Neighborhood Economic Development Corporation Mesa (NEDCO): The Entrepreneurial Artist (training), 2013. Centennial Theatre Foundation: Strategic planning and meeting facilitation, 2013.

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS: Council of Colleges of Arts and Sciences, (2018-present) Entrepreneurship Research Society – founding scholar (2013-present) Association of Arts Administration Educators (2012-present) Society for Arts Entrepreneurship Education (2018-present) American Evaluation Association (2014-2016) US Association of Small Business and Entrepreneurship (2011-2018) United Scenic Artists, Local 829 (1985-2010; inactive status 2010-present) Association for Theatre in Higher Education (2004-2011) International Association of Lighting Designers (1995-2014) United States Institute of Theatre Technology (1989-pesent)

Essig / CV 10 Illuminating Engineering Society (1989-2004)

COURSES TAUGHT: At Arizona State University: Graduate: Arts Policy; Arts Management; Arts Entrepreneurship; Leadership in the Creative and Cultural Industries; Strategy: Opportunity Recognition in the Creative and Cultural Industries Undergraduate: Management in the Arts (online undergraduate course); Foundations of Arts Entrepreneurship (live and online versions); Arts Entrepreneurship Seminar; First Year Experience; Orientation to Theatre and Film; Student Production Board – oversight and mentoring of student-run theatre company At UW-Madison: Computer Design Visualization: An Interdisciplinary Approach; “LIGHT!” an interdisciplinary exploration of the art, science, and cultural impact of light and lighting; Design and Technology Collaborative Studio; Site Specific Theatre Production; Lighting Design for Architecture; Stage Lighting Design I, II, III and IV

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE: Technical Working Group, Rural Policy Research Institute Cultural Wealth Lab Convener, CSU Deans semiannual meeting, Atlanta, GA, 2019 Publisher and co-editor, Artivate: A Journal of Entrepreneurship in the Arts. 2012 – 2018. (Founding Editor and Publisher Emerita, 2019-present) General editor, Theatre Design & Technology (TD&T), 2016-2018 Associate editor for lighting, Theatre Design & Technology (TD&T), 2011-2015 Board of Directors, Association of Arts Administration Educators, 2016 – 2018 Board of Directors, United States Institute for Theatre Technology, 2009-2012 Board of Directors, University/Resident Theatre Association, 2004-05 Mentor, ATHE Leadership Institute, 2006 and 2014 Grant Panelist, National Endowment for the Arts: Our Town program, 2014 External Evaluator, promotion and tenure, multiple (20+) national universities Member, College Board National Task Force on Arts Education, 2008-2009 Program review site visitor, Utah State University, 2010 Program review site visitor, University of Nevada – Reno, 2008 Program review site visitor, UC Santa Cruz Theatre Arts Department, 2008 Production review site visit, Brigham Young University, 2016 Manuscript reviewer, Cities, 2016 Manuscript reviewer, Cultural Trends, 2016 Manuscript reviewer, Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society, 2015 Manuscript reviewer, Focal Press, 2014 Manuscript reviewer, Routledge, 2013 Manuscript reviewer, Oxford University Press, 2012 Manuscript reviewer, Theatre Topics, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007 Respondent, USITT Lighting Graphics Standards Member, Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA) Educational Materials Committee. (Committee acts as jury and editorial board for all IES Educational

Essig / CV 11 publications) 1989-2002. Member, IESNA Theatre, Television, and Film Lighting Committee (TTFL), 1995-2004. Head, Theatre Lighting Task Group, TTFL 2002-2004. Judge USITT Design Expo 1996. Published in Theatre Design and Technology Summer 1996. Reviewer Parker and Wolf, Scene Design and Stage Lighting, 7th edition Harcourt Brace. 1993 Judge International Illumination Design Awards - North Central Region, 1992. Reviewer IES Educational Publications: "Color," "Design Process," "Psychological Aspects of Light," "Electrical Controls," from IES Intermediate Course in Lighting, 1993. Member, IESNA Theatre, Television, and Film Lighting Handbook Revision Committee, 1989- 1991.

Selected UNIVERSITY SERVICE: Arizona State University: Director, Herberger Institute Enterprise and Entrepreneurship Programs 2015-2018 Faculty Women’s Association T&P Workshop Presenter, 2016. University Tenure and Promotion Committee, 2012-2015. President’s Professor Selection Committee, 2015. Socially Engaged Practice Research Group, 2011- President’s Award for Innovation panelist, 2010. Regent’s Professor Selection Committee (Provost’s office), 2006-2008. Search Committee for University Provost (President's office), 2006. UW- Madison: Chair, Honorific Professorial Titles Committee, 2002-2004. Arts Institute Executive Committee, 2003-2004. Committee on Honorary Degrees, 2000-2004. Consultant and Specifier, School of Music: Old Music Hall lighting control system renovation. Humanities Divisional Executive Committee, 1997-2000. (Vice-Chair of committee and Chair of Course sub-committee, 1999-2000) Computational Sciences Cluster Hire Search Committee, 1999-2001. College of Letters and Science Facilities Planning Committee, 1995-2000. Mentor, Women Faculty Mentoring Program. 1999-2000; 2002-2004 Faculty Appeals Committee, 1994-1999. Faculty Compensation and Economic Benefits Commission, 1994-1997. Mentor, Madison Plan Mentor Program, 1990-1992.

COMMUNITY SERVICE (selected): Board of Directors, Self Help Graphics and Art, 2020-present Board of Directors (secretary), Rising Youth Theatre, 2015-2018 Member, Arizona/Mexico Commission Arts and Culture Committee, 2012 Mentor, Social Venture Partner Fast Pitch Competition, 2012, 2013 Board of Directors, Phoenix Fringe Festival, 2007-2012 Consultant (strategic planning), Orange Theatre Group (2011); Rising Youth Theatre (2012); Centennial Theatre Foundation (2013)

Essig / CV 12 Member, Maricopa Partnership for Arts and Culture, CALA (Latin American Arts Festival) planning group, 2007-2009. Community consultant, Actors Theatre of Phoenix, 2005, 2006. Grant panelist, Arizona Commission on the Arts, 2005. Adjudicator, Arizona State Playwriting Competition, 2005. Member, Tempe Convention and Visitors Bureau, Arte es Amor planning committee, 2005-2008 Volunteer, Kyrene Public Schools, Phoenix, Art Masterpiece volunteer, 2004-2011 Speaker, Conversations in Science: “From Page to Stage and the Science in Between,” 2003. Member, Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters Gallery, Overture project advisory board, 2002. Community volunteer for various organizations serving the local homeless population.

Essig / CV 13

Board of Trustees of The City University of New York

RESOLUTION TO Appoint Teresa Bandosz as Distinguished Professor at The City College of The City University of New York

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, Professor Teresa Bandosz is an internationally-renowned authority in non- engineered carbon-based materials and composites for environmental and energy- related applications; and

WHEREAS, Professor Bandosz has published over 380 peer-reviewed journal articles, 1 co-authored book, 1 edited book and 12 book chapters, has given over 160 conference presentations and has 8 patents; and

WHEREAS, Professor Bandosz has received over $10 million in continuous external funding since 1998 via over 30 grants from the National Science Foundation, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, National Aeronautics and Space Administration. the Environmental Protoection Agency, and the New York City Department of Environmental Protection, among others; and

WHEREAS, Professor Bandosz was a Fulbright Senior Scholar (2016), held Visiting Professorships at the University of Orleans, France (2009), University of Malaga, Spain (2013), Shinshu University, Japan (2014) and University of Adeliad, Australia (2014) and has given over 60 keynote, plenary and invited talks; and

WHEREAS, As one of her reviewers notes, Dr. Bandosz, “is among the top researchers worldwide in the area of surface chemistry of porous carbons and has not only unique expertise in the preparation of nanoporous carbons of desired absorption properties but also her research is focused on the application of these materials for environmental cleanup, regeneration and reuse as well as their application for methane storage and hydrogen storage. These topics are of paramount significance for solving important environmental and energy related problems”; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Bandosz joined The City College of New York as an Assistant Professor in 1997 and was promoted to Associate Professor in 2000 and Professor in 2005, having previously served as an Assistant Professor at the University of Mining and Metallurgy from 1984 to 1991; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Bandosz earned a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from Technical University of Cracow in Krakow, Poland, a D.Sc., in Physical/Analytical Chemistry from M. Curie-Sklodowska Univeristy in Lublin, Poland and served as a Post-doctoral Fellow at Syracuse University from 1991-1996.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

RESOLVED, That the Board of Trustees of The City University of New York appoint Teresa Bandosz as Distinguished Professor at The City College of New York effective July 1, 2021, with compensation of $28,594 per annum in addition to her regular academic salary, subject to financial ability.

EXPLANATION: Professor Bandosz has a long and internationally renowned career in her field and is conducting scholarship and teaching of the highest caliber. The City College and The City University of New York will be well-served by Professor Bandosz’s appointment as Distinguished Professor. CURRICULUM VITAE Teresa J. Bandosz City College of New York

I. Basic Information: Name: Teresa J. Bandosz Rank: Professor Department: Chemistry Co-appointment: Chemical Engineering

II. Higher Education: Degrees and Institutions which granted degrees Dates Conferred B.Sc, M.Sc., Chemical Engineering, Sept. 1979 - Sept. 1984 University of Mining and Metallurgy, Department of Processing of Coal in Power Engineering Chemistry Krakow, Poland

Ph.D., Chemical Engineering, Jan. 1987 - June 1989 Technical University of Cracow, Department of Chemical Engineering and Technology Krakow, Poland

Post doctoral Jan. 1991 - July 1996 Syracuse University, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science

D.Sc., Physical/Analytical Chemistry June 1998 Department of Chemistry M. Curie-Sklodowska University Lublin, Poland

Additional Higher Education/Education in Progress

None

III. Work Experience: Teaching: Institutions Dates Rank

University of Mining and Metallurgy; 1984-1991 Assistant professor The City College of New York; 1996-1997 Grant Assistant Professor 1997-2000 Assistant Professor 2000-2005 Associate Professor 2005- current Professor Dalian University of Technology 2006-2009 Guest Professor

Nonteaching Institutions Dates Rank Syracuse University 1991-2006 Research Associate

IV. Membership in Professional Societies:

 International Adsorption Society  American Institute of Chemical Engineers  American Chemical Society  American Carbon Society

V. Academic and Professional Honors and Prizes:

1. H factor 58 (Scopus, excluding self-citation); total citations> 16,000 2. Fulbright Senior Scholar (2016/2017) 3. Graffin Lecturer of The American Carbon Society (20167/2017) 4. Appointed to National Academies Committee On Examination of the Disposal of Activated Carbon from the Heating, Ventilation and Air Condition Systems at Chemical Agent Disposal Facilities (May 2008- May 2009). 5. Co-editor, Journal of Colloids and Interface Science (2014-present) 6. On the Editorial Board of Adsorption Science and Technology (2005-present) 7. On the Editorial Board of Chemical Engineering Journal (2017-present) 8. On the Editorial Board of Applied Surface Science (2014- present) 9. On the Editorial Board of Carbon (2014- present) 10. On the Editorial Board of Adsorption (2013-present) 11. On the Editorial Board of Journal of Colloid and Interface Science (2008-2010) 12. On the Advisory Board of American Carbon Society (2010- 2016). 13. On the Board of Directors of International Adsorption Society (2013-present) 14. On the Editorial Board of C (2015-present) 15. On the Editorial Board of Eurasian Chemical Technological Journal 16. On Scientific Committee of Pacific Basin Conference on Adsorption Science and Technology II, Australia, May 2000. 17. Session Organizer /Chair at Annual ACS Meetings in Philadelphia (2004) and San Diego (2005). 18. On the Scientific Committee of IV International Symposium on Surface Heterogeneity in Adsorption and Catalysis, August 2006 19. On the Scientific Committee of 2nd , 3rd, 4th and 5th Carbon for Environmental Protection Conference, 2009-2019. 20. On the Advisory Board of 1st United Arab Emirates Conference on Pure and Applied Chemistry (ECPAC11)-American University of Sharjah, February 2011. 21. On the Scientific Committee of Colloids and Materials, Amsterdam 2011. 22. On the Advisory Committee of International Carbon Conference, Krakow, Poland 2012

Page 2 of 73 23. On the Scientific Committee of Fundamental of Adsorption Conference 10, 2013- Baltimore 24. On the Scientific Committee of 5th and 6th International Colloid Conference, Amsterdam 2015, Berlin 2016. 25. On the Scientific Committee of Fundamentals of Adsorpiton-12 Conference, Fredrichshaffen, Germany 2016. 26. On the Scientific Committee of Carbon 2016, State College PA, July 12, 2016 27. On the Scientific committees of World Colloid and Interface Science Conferences (from 2014-) 28. Chair: Beyond Adsorption workshop, New York City, July 16, 2016. 29. On the Committee of the 8th Conference of Porosity Solids Delray Beach, May 2018 30. On the Scientific Committee of Carbon 0218, Madrid, July 2, 2018. 31. On the Scientific Committee of ISHHAC 10, Lublin, Poland, August 27, 2018 32. On the Scientific Committee of Ibero-American Conference on Adsorption, Gijon, September 4, 2018 33. Editor “Activated Carbon Surfaces in Environmental Remediation”, Elsevier, 2006. 34. Visiting Professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, The University of Queensland, Australia; Fall 2006 35. Guest Professor/ Sky Scholar, Dalian University of Technology, China 2006- 2009. 36. Visiting Professor, University of Orleans, France, Fall 2009. 37. Visiting Professor, University of Malaga, Spain, Fall 2013. 38. Visiting Professor, Shinshu University, Japan, Spring-Summer 2014 39. Visiting Professor, University of Adelaide, Australia, winter 2014. 40. Invited speaker to 1st International Symposium on Chemistry of Energy Conversion and Storage (Germany; February 2001). 41. Plenary speaker 9Th International Symposium on Particle Size Analysis, Environmental Protection and Powder Technology, Balatonfured, Hangary September 5-7, 2004. 42. Discussion leader at Hydrocarbon Resources Gordon Conference (January 2009) 43. Keynote speaker at Brazilian Institute of Chemical Engineers Meeting, Iguassu Falls, Brazil, September 2010. 44. Plenary speaker of Carbon in Catalysis, CarboCat4, Dalian, China, November 2010. 45. Invited Keynote speaker to Carbon for Energy storage and Environment Protection IV (France, September 2011) 46. Plenary speaker at 2-nd South American Conference of Adsorbents and Adsorption. San Luis, Argentina, February 20-23, 2013. 47. Plenary speaker at 4th World Colloid Conference: Surface design and Engineering. Madrid Spain, June 15-18, 2014; 48. Plenary speaker at III Workshop on Adsorption Catalysis and Porous Materials, August 29-31 2016, Bogota, Colombia. 49. Invited speaker, Graphchina 2016, Qingadao, China Sept. 2016. Moderator at USA-China Forum.

Page 3 of 73 50. Plenary speaker at TLMC=2, Termas de Chile, Chile Nov 14-Nov 19, 2016 51. Plenary speaker at IX ( 2016 ) and X (2018) International Symposium of Physics and Chemistry of Carbon and Nanoenergetic Materials, Almaty, Kazakhstan 52. Keynote speaker at Carbon 2018, Madrid, Spain, July 2, 2018. 53. Keynote speaker at 3rd Ibero-American Congress on Adsorption, Gijon, Spain, Sept. 3, 2018 54. Invite Keynote speaker at XVII meeting of Brazilian Materials Research Society, Natal, Brazil, Sept 18, 2018 55. Chair: Beyond Adsorption 2 workshop- planned in July 2019 in CCNY 56. Excellence in Review Award; Environmental Science and Technology, 2005 57. Excellence in Review Award; Carbon, 2008 58. Excellence in Review Award; Carbon, 2012 59. Excellence in Review Award; Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, 2012.

VI. Fellowships, Grants and Contracts: Externally Funded Grants  National Research Council/ National Academy of Sciences Fall 1997 Travel grant to Ukraine to start collaboration with Ukrainian Academy of Sciences  NYC DEP Jan. 98-Jan. 99 Study of Granular Activated Carbons $272,319  NASA (PAIR) (associate investigator) June 98-June 01 Remote Sensing and Environmental/Climate Research  NYC DEP May 99-May 02 Study of Granular Activated Carbons $682,896  CUNY Collaborative Incentive Grants program Sept.99-Aug.01 Activated Carbons Obtained from New York City Municipal Sludge as Sorbents for Sulfur Dioxide $32,000  Graduate Research Technology Initiative 1999 Evaluation of the levels of Contaminants and Pollutants in Water and Air in New York $50,000  PRF Sept.00-Aug.04 The Mechanism of Methyl Mercaptan Adsorption/Oxidation on Activated Carbons $60,000  E.I. de Pont de Nemours and Company Feb.01-Jan.02 Determination of Surface pKa Distributions using Titration Methods in Polar and Non Polar Solvents $ 15,000  Synagro Corporation Oct. 01-Sept. 02 Terrene® Modified with Spent Oil as a Precursor for Efficient Adsorbents for H2S and SO2 removal. $ 11,000  NYC DEP May 02-May 05 Study of Granular Activated Carbons $476,490  NATO (Collaborative Linkage Grant: USA-Spain-Ukraine) April01-May 04 Adsorption of hydrogen sulfide on Nitrogen Modified Activated carbons $ 25,000  CRDF (USA- Moldova): March 02-Apr.04

Page 4 of 73 Activated Carbons for Water Treatment $5,800  NYSERDA Feb 04-June04 Sewage Sludge Enriched Adsorbents for Removal of Acidic Gases $41,000  NYC DEP May 05-May 07 Study of Granular Activated Carbons $562,000  ARO Oct.05-Oct.09 Sorbents and Mechanisms of Removal $370,000  NYSERDA April 06-March 07 Adsorption of Biogas on Industrial Sludge Derived Adsorbents $50,000  NYC DEP May 08-May 10 Study of Granular Activated Carbons $672,000  NSF April 08-March 11 Removal of Toxic Gases by Intercalation and Reactive Adsorption $177,927  NSF Oct.09- Sept. 12 Investigation of Factors Affecting Adsorption Capacity and Selectivity of Activated Carbon in Highly Efficient Desulfurization of Diesel Fuel: $292,000  ARO Feb.10-Jan. 13 Nanoengineered Carbon-Based Materials For Reactive Adsorption of Toxic Industrial Compounds $370,000  NYC DEP May 10-Dec. 13 Study of Granular Activated Carbons $1,100,200  Micromeritics Instrument Corporation ( 2011)- ASAP 2050 $98,000  ARO –DURIP: Acquisition Of High Sensitivity Instruments To Enhance The Study Of Reactive Adsorption On Nanoengineered Materials And Their Application In Filters And Gas Sensors 2011-2012 $ 220,000  NSF Oct 2011-Sept 2017 Collaborative research: nano-engineered MOF-graphene materials- new perspectives for reactive adsorption and catalysis $ 263, 600.  EPA Dec 11- Dec. 15 Sewage and industrial sludge based composite adsorbents for removal of contaminants from drinking water sources $499,746  ARO June 13- March 2017 Insight Into Multifunctional Reactive Adsorbents: Engaging Chemistry, Porosity, Photoactivity and Conductivity into Decontamination Process $ 450,000  NYC DEP 2014-2017 Study of Granular Activated Carbons $1,182,924  NSF QEMT: 2016 Acquisition of Nanofrazor $637,715  ARO DURIP 2017 Acquisition of High Sensitivity Instruments to Enhance Advanced Recognition of Photocatalytic Activity of Composite Materials as CWA Deactivation and Detection Media $152,215  NYC DEP 2018-2021 Study of Granular Activated Carbons $1,421,668

Page 5 of 73

Internal Grants (CUNY)  CUNY Collaborative Incentive Grants program Sept.99-Aug.01 Activated Carbons Obtained from New York City Municipal Sludge as Sorbents for Sulfur Dioxide $32,000  Graduate Research Technology Initiative 1999 Evaluation of the levels of Contaminants and Pollutants in Water and Air in New York $50,000  CUNY- Energy Institute : Graphene Oxide /MnO2 Composites: Investigation of energy storage capability 2011-2013 $ 50,00  Seven PSC CUNY grants

VII. Publications authored:

1. Books Authored Detoxification of Chemical Warfare Agents: From WWI to Multifunctional Nanocomposite Approaches Dimitrios A. Giannakoudakis and Teresa J. Bandosz Springer; 1st ed. 2018 edition (January 11, 2018) ISBN-13: 978-3319707594

2. Books Edited Activated Carbon Surfaces in Environmental Remediation, Bandosz, T. J. Ed. pp. 159-230. Elsevier, Oxford, 2006.

3. Book Chapters

1. Graphite Oxide Nanocomposites for air stream desulfurization Dimitrios A. Giannakoudakis, Teresa J. Bandosz Elsevier Inc., Series: Advanced Nanomaterials, Volume: Composite Nanoadsorbents, Editor: George Z. Kryzas, Elsevier, 2018 2. Graphite Oxide-MOF Hybrid Materials T. J. Bandosz in Nanocarbon-Inorganic Hybrids, D. Elder, Editor. Varlag E. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co, 2014. ISBN: 978-3-11-026986-4 3. Removal of Toxic Gases on Activated Carbons T. J. Bandosz In Green Carbons. T. E. Rufford, J. Zhou and D. Jurcakova Eds, Pan Stanford Publishing, 2014, ISBN-13: 978-9814411134 4. Surface Chemistry of Carbon Materials T. J. Bandosz In Carbon Materials for Catalysis, J.L. Figuerdo and Ph. Serp. Eds. Wiley, New York, 2008.

Page 6 of 73 5. Surface Chemistry of Activated Carbons and its Characterization C.O. Ania, C. O. and T. J. Bandosz In Activated Carbon Surfaces in Environmental Remediation, Bandosz, T. J. Ed. pp. 159-230. Elsevier, Oxford, 2006. 6. Desulfurization on Activated Carbons T. J. Bandosz In Activated Carbon Surfaces in Environmental Remediation, Bandosz, T. J. Ed. pp. 231-292, Elsevier, 2006. 7. Carbonaceous Materials as Desulfurization Media T. J. Bandosz In Combined and Hybrid Adsorbents: Fundamentals and Applications José Miguel Loureiro and Mykola T. Kartel Ed., NATO Science, Springer 2006 p.145-164. 8. Inverse gas chromatography at infinite dilution as a method to determine the structural and chemical features of activated carbon surfaces T.J.Bandosz in Encyclopedia of Colloid and Interface Science, A. Hubbard Ed., M. Decker, 2006. 9. Adsorption of Inorganic Gases and VOCs on Activated Carbons T.J.Bandosz In Adsorption by Carbons, Eduardo J. Bottani and Juan M.D. Tascon, Ed.; Elsevier, 2005. 10. Structure Models of Porous Carbons T.J. Bandosz, M. Briggs, K.E. Gubbins, Y. Hattori, T, Iiyama, K. Kaneko, J.Picunic, K. Thomson In Chemistry and Physics of Carbon, Vol. 29, L. Radovic, Ed. Marcel Dekker, New York, 2003 11. Adsorption Systems for Odour Treatment A. Turk, T.J. Bandosz In Odours in Wastewater Treatment: Measurement, Modeling and Control: Stuez, R. and Frechen, F-B. Eds.: IWA, p. 354-364, IWA Publishing, , 2000. 12. Adsorption with Soft Adsorbents and Adsorbates. Theory and Practice. G. F. Cerofolini, L. Meda, T. J. Bandosz In Adsorption and Its Application in Industry and Environmental Protection, Ed. A. Dabrowski, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1998.

4. Juried/Refereed Publications ( 382 ) a) Articles in Published Journals

1. Carbon Quantum Dot Surface-Chemistry-Dependent Ag Release Governs the High Antibacterial Activity of Ag-Metal–Organic Framework Composites N. A. Travlou, M. Algarra, C. Alcoholado, M. Cifuentes-Rueda, A. M. Labella, Juan M. Lázaro-Martínez, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, T.J. Bandosz, ACS Appl. Bio Mater.2018, 1 (3), pp 693–707DOI: 10.1021/acsabm.8b00166 2. Origin and Perspectives of the Photochemical Activity of Nanoporous Carbons T.J. Bandosz, C.O. Ania Advanced Science (invited review) 2018, 1800293

Page 7 of 73 3. Role of heteroatoms in S, N‐codoped nanoporous carbons in CO2 (photo)electrochemical reduction W. Li, T.J. Bandosz ChemSusChem 2018, https://doi.org/10.1002/cssc.201801073 4. Removal of Formaldehyde on Carbon -Based Materials: A Review of the Recent Approaches and Findings S. Suresh, T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2018, 137, 207-221 5. Role of sulfur and nitrogen surface groups in adsorption of formaldehyde on nanoporous carbons G. deFalco, W. Li, S. Cimino, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2018, 138, 283-291. 6. S- and N-doped carbon quantum dots: Surface chemistry dependent antibacterial activity N.A. Travlou, D.A. Giannakoudakis, M. Algarra, A.M Labella, E. Rodriguez- Castellon, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2018, 135, 104-111. 7. Electrodeposited P-Co Nanoparticles in Deep Eutectic Solvents and Their Performance in Water Splitting Kun Li, Tie-Zhen Ren1, Zhong-Yong Yuan, Teresa J. Bandosz International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2018,43, 10448-10457. 8. Chemically heterogeneous nitrogen sites of various reactivity in porous carbons provide high stability of CO2 electroreduction catalysts. W. Li, N. Fechler, T.J. Bandosz Applied Catalysis B 2018, 234, 1-9. 9. Exploring the effect of ultramicropores distribution on gravimetric capacitance of nanoporous carbons Mariusz Barczak, Yehya Elsayed, Jacek Jagiello, Teresa J.Bandosz Electrochimica Acta 2018, 275, 236-247 10. CaTiO3 perovskite in the framework of activated carbon and its effect on enhanced electrochemical capacitance Xiao-Li Cao, Tie-Zhen Ren, Zhong-Yong Yuan, Teresa J.Bandosz Electrochimica Acta 2018, 268, 73-81. 11. A New Generation of Surface Active Carbon Textiles as Reactive Adsorbents of Indoor Formaldehyde G. deFalco, M. Barczak, F.Montagnaro, T.J. Bandosz ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces. 2018, 10, 8066-8076. 12. Irreversible water mediated transformation of BCN from a 3D highly porous form to its nonporous hydrolyzed counterpart M. Florent and T.J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. A, 2018,6, 3510-3521 13. Exploring the effects of surface chemistry on photosensitivity and stability of modified porous carbon textiles. N.A. Travlou, M. Barczak, J. Hoffman, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2018, 131, 1-9 .

Page 8 of 73 14. Zinc peroxide nanoparticles: Surface, chemical and optical properties and the effect of thermal treatment on the detoxification of mustard gas G.A. Giannakoudakis, M. Florent, R. Wallace, J. Seccor, Ch. Karwacki and T.J. Bandosz Appl.Catal B 2018, 226, 429-440 15. The Role of Carbon on Copper–Carbon Composites for the Electrooxidation of Alcohols in an Alkaline Medium Leticia García-Cruz, Conchi O. Ania, Ana Paula Carvalho, Teresa J. Bandosz, Vicente Montiel and Jesús Iniesta C 2017, 3, 36; doi:10.3390/c3040036 16. Efficient Air Desulfurization Catalysts Derived from Pig Manure Liquefaction Char Rajiv Wallace, Sundaramurthy Suresh, Elham H. Fini and Teresa J. Bandosz C 2017, 3, 37; doi:10.3390/c3040037 17. Photosensitivity of g-C3N4/S-doped carbon composites: Study of surface stability upon exposure to CO2 and/or water at ambient light. W. Li, E. Rodriguez-Castellon , T.J. Bandosz Journal of Materials Chemistry A, 2017, 5, 24880 - 24891 18. Combined Effect of Porosity and Surface Chemistry on the Electrochemical Reduction of Oxygen on Cellular Vitreous Carbon Foam Catalyst. J. Encalada; K. Savaram; N. A. Travlou; W. Li, Q.Li, C. Delgado-Sánchez; V. Fierro; A. Celzard; H. He, T.J. Bandosz ACS Catal. 2017, 7 , 7466–7478. DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.7b01977 19. Mustard gas surrogate interactions with modified porous carbon fabrics: Effect of oxidative treatment M. Florent, D.A. Giannakoudakis, T.J. Bandosz Langmuir, 2017, 33, 11475-11483; DOI:10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b02047 20. Alterations in the surface features of S-doped carbon and g-C3N4 photocatalysts in the presence of CO2 and water upon visible light exposure. W. Li, Y.Hu, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem A. 2017, 5, 16315-16325. 21. Carbon Textiles Modified with Copper-Based Reactive Adsorbents as Efficient Media for Detoxification of Chemical Warfare Agents M. Florent, D.A. Giannakoudakis. R. Wallace, T.J. Bandosz ACS Appl. Mater. Interf. 2017, 9, 26965−26973 22. Smart textiles of MOF/g-C3N4 nanospheres for the rapid detection/detoxification of chemical warfare agents. D.A. Giannakoudakis, Y. Hu, M. Florent, T.J. Bandosz Nanoscale Horizons 2017, 2, 356-364; DOI:10.1039/c7nh00081b 23. Porous carbon modified with sulfur in energy related applications T.J. Bandosz, T-Z. Ren Carbon 118, 2017, 561-777. doi.org/10.1016/j.carbon.2017.03.095 24. Mixed CuFe and ZnFe (hydr)oxides as reactive adsorbents of chemical warfare agent surrogates M. Florent, D. Giannakoudakis, R. Wallace, T.J. Bandosz J. Hazard. Mater. 2017, 329, 141–149.

Page 9 of 73 25. Ferrihydrite deposited on cotton textiles as protection media against the chemical warfare agent surrogate (2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfide) R. Wallace, D. A. Giannakoudakis, M. Florent, Ch. J. Karwacki, T. J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. A, 2017,5, 4972-4981 26. N-doped polymeric resin-derived porous carbons as efficient ammonia removal and detection media N.A. Travlou, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2017, 117, 228-238. 27. Highly luminescent S-doped carbon dots for the selective detection of ammonia N.A. Travlou, J. Secor, T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2017, 114, 544-556 28. Pyridinic-N groups and ultramicropore nanoreactors enhance CO2 electrochemical reduction on porous carbon catalysts W. Li, B. Herkt, M. Seredych, T. J. Bandosz Applied Catalysis B 2017, 207, 195-206 29. Evidence for CO2 reactive adsorption on nanoporous S- and N-doped T. J. Bandosz , M. Seredych , E. Rodríguez-Castellon, Y.Cheng , L.L. Daemen , A. J. Ramírez-Cuesta Carbon 2016, 96 , 856-863. 30. Carbofuran Phenol 3-Keto in soy sauce by ratiometric nanosensor based in Carbon dots coated with vitamin B12 B. B. Campos, R. Contreras-Cáceres, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, J. CG Esteves da Silva,T. J. Bandosz, M.Algarra Sensors and Actuators B Chemical , 2017, 239, 553-561 31. Highly Efficient Air Desulfurization on Self-Assembled Bundles of Copper Hydroxide Nanorods Dimitrios A. Giannakoudakis, Mingyung Jiang, and Teresa J. Bandosz ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2016, 8 31986–31994 32. Sulfur-mediated photochemical energy harvesting in nanoporous carbons M. Gomis-Berenguer, M. Seredych, J. Iniesta, J.C. Lima, T.J. Bandosz, and C. O. Ania Carbon 2016, 104,253–259. doi:10.1016/j.carbon.2016.02.058. 33. Oxidized g-C3N4 Nanospheres as Catalytically Photoactive Linkers in MOF/g- C3N4 Composite of Hierarchical Pore Structure. D. A. Giannakoudakis, N. A. Travlou, J. Secor, T. J.Bandosz Small 2017, 13, 1601758. . DOI: 10.1002/smll.201601758. 34. Reactive Removal of 2-Chloroethyl Ethyl Sulfide Vapors under Visible Light Irradiation by Cerium Oxide Modified Highly Porous Zirconium (Hydr) Oxide J. K. Mitchell, J. A. Arcibar-Orozco, T. J. Bandosz . Applied Surface Science, 2016, 390, 735-743. DOI: 10.1016/j.apsusc.2016.08.118 35. Analysis of sulfamethoxazole and trimethoprim adsorption on sewage sludge and fish waste derived adsorbents L. Nielsen, L. Bandosz T.J. Micro. Meso. Mater. 2016, 220, 58-72. 36. Analysis of the competitive adsorption of pharmaceuticals on waste derived materials

Page 10 of 73 L. Nielsen, L., Bandosz, T.J. Chem. Eng. J. 2016,287, 139-147. 37. Effect of GO phase in Zn (OH)2/GO composite on the extent of photocatalytic reactive adsorption of mustard gas surrogate. D. A. Giannakoudakis, J. A. Arcibar-Orozco, T. J. Bandosz. Appl. Catal. B Environ. 2016, 183, 37–46 38. Evaluation of CO2 interactions with S-doped nanoporous carbon and its composites with a reduced GO: Effect of surface features on an apparent physical adsorption mechanism M. Kwiatkowski, A.Policicchio, M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 98, 2016, 250-258 ,doi.org/10.1016/j.carbon.2015.11.019 39. Reactive Adsorption of Mustard Gas Surrogate on Zirconium (Hydr)Oxide/Graphite Oxide Composites: The Role of Surface and Chemical Features. D. A. Giannakoudakis, J. K. Mitchell, T. J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. A 2016, 4, 1008-1019 40. Insight into ammonia sensing on heterogeneous S- and N- co-doped nanoporous carbons. N. A. Travlou, M. Seredych, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2016, 96, 1014–1021. 41. Sensing of NH3 on heterogeneous nanoporous carbons in the presence of humidity. N. A. Travlou, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2016, 100, 64-73 42. Nanoporous Carbons: Looking Beyond Their Perception as Adsorbents, Catalyst Supports and Supercapacitors. T.J.Bandosz The Chemical Record 2016,16, 205-218, DOI: 10.1002/tcr.201500231 43. Mesoporous graphitic carbon nitride-based nanospheres as visible-light active chemical warfare agents decontaminant D. A. Giannakoudakis, M. Seredych, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, T. J. Bandosz ChemNanoMat. 2016, 2, 2687-272. 44. Photoactivity of g-C3N4/S-doped porous carbon composite: synergistic effect of composite formation. M. Seredych, S. Łoś, D. A. Giannakoudakis, Enrique Rodríguez-Castellón, Teresa J. Bandosz ChemSusChem 2016, 9, 1 – 6. 45. Effect of Ag Containing (Nano)Particles on Reactive Adsorption of Mustard Gas Surrogate on Iron Oxyhdroxide/Graphite Oxide Composites Under Visible Light Irradiation J.Arcibar –Orozco, D.A. Giannakoudakis T.J. Bandosz Chem. Eng. J. 2016, 303, 123-136 10.1016/j.cej.2016.05.111. 46. Metal Free Nanoporous Carbon as a Catalysts for Electrochemical Reduction of CO2 to CO and CH4. W. Li. M. Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz ChemSusChem 2016, 9 606-616. 47. Moisture insensitive adsorption of ammonia on resorcinol-formaldehyde resins

Page 11 of 73 M. Seredych, C. O. Ania, T.J. Bandosz J. Hazard. Mat. 2016, 96–104. doi:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2015.11.022 48. Electrochemical Reduction of Oxygen on Hydrophobic Ultramicroporous PolyHIPE Carbon M. Seredych, A. Szczurek, V. Fierro, A. Celzard, T.J. Bandosz ACS Catal., 2016, 6, 5618–5628. DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.6b01497. 49. Alterations of S-doped porous carbon-rGO composites surface features upon CO2 adsorption at ambient conditions M. Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon. T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2016, 107, 501–509. doi:10.1016/j.carbon.2016.06.028 50. Nitrogen enrichment of S-doped nanoporous carbon by g-C3N4: Insight into photosensitivity enhancement. M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2016, 107, 895–906. doi:10.1016/j.carbon.2016.06.100 51. Oxygen reduction on chemically heterogeneous iron-containing nanoporous carbon: The effects of specific surface functionalities. M. Seredych, M. Biggs, T.J. Bandosz Micro. Meso. Mater. 2016, 221, 137–149doi:10.1016/j.micromeso.2015.09.032. 52. Carbon dots as fluorescent sensor for detection of explosive nitrocompounds. B. B. Campos R. Contreras-Cáceres, T.J. Bandosz, J.Jiménez-Jiménez, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, J. C.G. Esteves da Silva, M. Algarra, Carbon 2016, 102, 171–178. doi:10.1016/j.carbon.2016.05.30 53. Nitrogen-Doped Activated Carbon-Based Ammonia Sensors: Effect of Specific Surface Functional Groups on Carbon Electronic Properties. N. Travlou, C. Ushay, M. Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz. ACS Sens., 2016, 1, 591–599. DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.6b00093. 54. . S-doped carbon aerogels/GO composites as oxygen reduction catalysts. M. Seredych, K.Laszlo, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz J. Energ. Chem. 2016, 25, 236–245. doi:10.1016/j.jechem.2016.01.005 55. Carbon phase-graphite oxide composites based on solid state interactions between the components: Importance of surface chemistry and microstructure. M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz. Carbon 2015, 95, 580-588: DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2015.08.077 56. Sulfur-doped carbon aerogel as a metal-free oxygen reduction catalyst M. Seredych, K. Laszlo, T.J. Bandosz. ChemCatChem 2015, 7,72924-2931: DOI: 10.1002/cctc.201500192 57. Electrical characterization of ammonia carbon-based sensors M. Koscinski, M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz, M. Sliwinska-Bartkowiak.. Acta Physica Polonica A, 2015, 128.182-184: DOI: 10.12693/APhysPolA.128.18 58. Effect of nanoporous carbon surface chemistry on the removal of endocrine disruptors from water phase. C. B. Vidal, M. Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, R. F. Nascimento, T. J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interf. Sci. 449, 2015, 180-191: DOI: 10.1016/j.jcis.2014.11.034 59. Peculiar properties of mesoporous synthetic carbon/graphene phase composites and their effect on supercapacitive performance. M. Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz.

Page 12 of 73 ChemSusChem 2015, 18, 955-1965: DOI: 10.1002/cssc.201500156 60. Time-resolved fluorescence and ultrafast energy transfer in a zinc (hydr)oxide– graphite oxide mesoporous composite J. Secor, V. Narinesingh, M. Seredych, D. A. Giannakoudakis, T. J. Bandosz, R. R. Alfano, Journal of Photonics for Energy 2015, 5, 53084, doi: 10.1117/1.JPE.5.053084 61. Copper Hydroxyl Nitrate/Graphite Oxide Composite as Superoxidant for the Decomposition/Mineralization of Organophosphate-Based Chemical Warfare Agent Surrogate J. A. Arcibar-Orozco, D. A. Giannakoudakis, T. J. Bandosz Advanced Materials Interfaces 2015, 2, 1-9, doi: 10.1002/admi.201500215 62. Reactive adsorption of CEES on iron oxyhydroxide/(N-)graphite oxide composites under visible light exposure J. A. Arcibar-Orozco, S. Panettieri, T. J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem, A, 2015, 3, 17080-17090, doi: 10.1039/C5TA04223B 63. Visible light enhanced removal of a sulfur mustard gas surrogate from a vapor phase on novel hydrous ferric oxide/graphite oxide composites J. A. Arcibar-Orozco, T. J. Bandosz, J. Mater. Chem, A 3, 2015, 220-231, doi: 10.1039/C4TA04159C 64. Cu-BTC MOF / Graphene-based hybrid materials as low concentration ammonia sensors. Nikolina A. Travlou, Kavindra Singh, Enrique Rodríguez-Castellón and Teresa J. Bandosz. J. Mater. Chem A. 2015,3, 11417-1142913. 65. Robust graphene-based monoliths of homogeneous ultramicroporosity. Teresa J. Bandosz, , Shuwen Wang, Daiki Minami, Katsumi Kaneko. Carbon 2015, 87, 87–97. 66. Effect of chemical heterogeneity on photoluminescence of graphite oxide treated with S-/N-containing modifiers . Amani M. Ebrahim, Enrique Rodríguez-Castellón, José María Montenegro, Teresa J. Bandosz. Applied Surface Science 215, 332, 272–280. 67. Adsorption of carbamazepine on sludge/fish waste derived adsorbents: Effect of surface chemistry and texture. Lilja Nielsen, Pengfei Zhang, Teresa J. Bandosz. Chemical Engineering Journal 2015 , 267, 170–181 68. Visible light enhanced removal of a sulfur mustard gas surrogate from a vapor phase on novel hydrous ferric oxide/graphite oxide composites. Javier A. Arcibar-Orozco and Teresa J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. A 2015,3, 220-231 DOI: 10.1039/C4TA04159C 69. Activated carbon-based gas sensors: effects of surface features on the sensing mechanism Nikolina A. Travlou, Mykola Seredych, Enrique Rodríguez-Castellón , Teresa J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. A 2015,3, 3821-3831

Page 13 of 73 70. Effects of surface heterogeneity of cobalt oxyhydroxide/graphite oxide composites on reactive adsorption of hydrogen sulfide. Marc Florent, Teresa J. Bandosz,. Microporous and Mesoporous Materials 2015, 204, 8–14. 71. Role of Surface Chemistry and Morphology in the Reactive Adsorption of H2S on Iron (Hydr)Oxide/Graphite Oxide Composites. Javier A. Arcibar-Orozco , Rajiv Wallace , Joshua K. Mitchell, Teresa J. Bandosz Langmuir, 2015, 31 (9), 2730–2742 72. Reactive adsorption of pharmaceuticals on tin oxide pillared montmorillonite: Effect of visible light exposure. Carla B. Vidal, André B. dos Santos, Ronaldo F. do Nascimiento, Teresa J. Bandosz. Chemical Engineering Journal 2015, 259, 865–875 73. Enhanced reactive adsorption of H2S on Cu–BTC/ S- and N-doped GO composites. Amani M. Ebrahim, Jacek Jagiello and Teresa J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. A 2015,3, 8194-8204 74. New copper/GO based material as an efficient oxygen reduction catalyst in an alkaline medium: The role of unique Cu/rGO architecture. Conchi O. Ania, Mykola Seredych, Enrique Rodriguez-Castellon, Teresa J. Bandosz, Applied Catalysis B: Environmental. 2015, 163, 424–435 75. Removal of hydrogen sulfide at ambient conditions on cadmium/GO-based composite adsorbents. Marc Florent, Rajiv Wallace, Teresa J. Bandosz. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 2015, 448, 1573–581 76. Key role of terminal hydroxyl groups and visible light in the reactive adsorption/catalytic conversion of mustard gas surrogate on zinc (hydr)oxides. Dimitrios A. Giannakoudakis, Javier A. Arcibar-Orozco, Teresa J. Bandosz,. Applied Catalysis B: Environmental, 2015, 174–175 96–104 77. Comparison of melamine resin and melamine network as precursors for carbon electrodes. Erika Fiset, Thomas E. Rufford, Mykola Seredych, Teresa J. Bandosz, Denisa Hulicova-Jurcakova. Carbon 2015, 81, 239–250 78. Engineering adsorbent surfaces: Metal-organic framework/graphite oxide composites. C. Petit and T.J. Bandosz. J. Colloid Interf. Sci., feature article. 447, 139–151; DOI: 10.1016/j.jcis.2014.08.026 2015 , 79. Zinc (hydr)oxide/graphite oxide/AuNPs composites: Role of surface features in H2S reactive adsorption. D. A. Giannakoudakis, T. J. Bandosz. J. Colloid Interf.Sci. 2014, 436, 296-305. DOI: 10.1016/j.jcis.2014.08.04 80. Nanoporous carbons as gas sensors: Exploring the surface sensitivity. Kavindra Singh, Nikolina A. Travlou, Svetlana Bashkova, Enrique Rodríguez- Castellón, Teresa J. Bandosz.

Page 14 of 73 Carbon 2014, 80, 183-192. DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2014.08.055 81. On the photoactivity of S-doped nanoporous carbons: Importance of surface chemistry and porosity. M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Chinese Journal of Catalysis 2014 35, 807-814. 82. Effect of visible light and electrode wetting on the capacitive performance of S- and N-doped nanoporous carbons: Importance of surface chemistry Mykola Seredych, Enrique Rodríguez-Castellón, Mark J. Biggs, William Skinner, Teresa J. Bandosz Cabon 2014, 78, 540-558. 83. The effects of activated carbon surface features on the reactive adsorption of carbamazepine and sulfamethoxazole Lilja Nielsen, Mark J. Biggs, William Skinner, Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2014, 80, 419-432 84. New CuxSy/nanoporous carbon composites as efficient oxygen reduction catalysts in alkaline medium Mykola Seredych , Enrique Rodriguez-Castellon and Teresa J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. A, 2014, 2, 20164-20176; DOI: 10.1039/C4TA05342G 85. The effects of fabrication temperature on current-voltage characteristics and energy efficiencies of quantum dot sensitized ZnOH-GO hybrid solar cells S. M. Z. Islam, Taposh Gayen, Naing Tint, Lingyan Shi, Mykola Seredych, Teresa J. Bandosz and Robert Alfano J. Appl. Phys. 2014, 116, DOI: 10.1063/1.4899203 86. Insight into the Capacitive Performance of Sulfur‐Doped Nanoporous Carbons Modified by Addition of Graphene Phase M Seredych, K Singh, TJ Bandosz Electroanalysis 2014, 26, 109-120. 87. Photoluminescence of Nanoporous Carbons: Opening a New Application Route for Old Materials TJ Bandosz, E Rodriguez-Castellon, JM Montenegro, M. Seredych Carbon, 2014, 77, 671-659. DOI: 10.1016/j.carbon.2014.05.070 88. Luminescent carbon nanoparticles: effects of chemical functionalization, and evaluation of Ag+ sensing properties Manuel Algarra, Bruno B. Campos, Ksenija Radotić, Dragosav Mutavdžić, Teresa Bandosz, J. Jiménez-Jiménez, E. Rodriguez-Castellón, , Joaquim C. G. Esteves da Silva Journal of Materials Chemistry A 2014, 2, 8342-8351 89. Hybrid Solar cell of micro/mesoporous Zn(OH)2 and its graphite composites sensitized by CdSe quantum dots SM Z. Islam ; Taposh Gayen ; Naing Tint ; Lingyan Shi ; Amani M. Ebrahim ; Mykola Seredych ; Teresa J. Bandosz ; Robert Alfano J. Photon. Energy 2014, 4043098 doi:10.1117/1.JPE.4.043098 90. Carbon dots obtained using hydrothermal treatment of formaldehyde. Cell imaging in vitro

Page 15 of 73 M. Algarra, M. Pérez-Martín, M. Cifuentes-Rueda, J. Jiménez-Jiménez, J. C. G. Esteves da Silva, T. J. Bandosz, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, J. T. López Navarrete, J. Casado Nanoscale 2014, 6, 9071-9077 91. Complexity of CO2 adsorption on nanoporous sulfur-doped carbons: Is surface chemistry an important factor? M. Seredych, J. Jagiello, T.J.Bandosz Carbon 2014, 74, 207-2017 92. Visible light driven photoelectrochemical water splitting on metal free nanoporous carbons promoted by chromophoric functional groups. Ania, C.O.; Seredych, M.; Rodriguez-Castellon, E.; Bandosz, T.J. Carbon 2014, 79, 432–441 93. On the photoactivity of S-doped nanoporous carbons: Importance of surface chemistry and porosity. M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Chinese Journal of Catalysis 2014, 35, 807-814. 94. Carbon coated silica doped with cerium/zirconium mixed oxides as NO2 adsorbents at ambient conditions. A. Ebrahim, T.J. Bandosz J. Phys. Chem. C 2014, 118, 8982-8992. 95. Effect of visible-light exposure and electrolyte oxygen content on capacitance of sulfur-doped carbon K. Sing, M. Seredych. E. Rodiguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz ChemElectroChem , 2014, 1, 565-572. 96. Effect of amine modification on the properties of zirconium–carboxylic acid based materials and their applications as NO2 adsorbents at ambient conditions A. Ebrahim, T.J. Bandosz Microporous and Mesoporous Materials 2014, 188, 149-162. 97. Removal of dorzolamide from biomedical wastewaters with adsorption onto graphite oxide/poly(acrylic acid) grafted chitosan nanocomposite G.Z. Kryzas, D.N. Bikiaris, M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz, E.A. Deliyanni Bioresource Technology 2014, 152, 399-406 98. Cu-BTC/aminated graphite oxide composites as high-efficiency CO2 capture media A. Policicichio, Y. Zhao, Q. Zhong, R.G. Agostino, T.J. Bandosz ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces 2014, 6, 101-108. 99. Effect of surface chemical and structural heterogeneity of copper based MOF/graphite oxide composites on the adsorption of ammonia S. Bashkova, T.J. Bandosz Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 2014, 417, 109-114. 100. Insight into the mechanism of CO2 adsorption on Cu-BTC and its composites with graphite oxide or aminated graphite oxide Y. Zhao, M. Seredych, J. Jagiello, Q. Zhong, T.J. Bandosz Chemical Engineering Journal 2014, 239, 399-407 101. Municipal waste conversion to hydrogen sulfide adsorbents: Investigation of the synergistic effects of sewage sludge/fish waste mixture

Page 16 of 73 R. Wallace, M. Seredych, P. Zhang, and T. J. Bandosz Chemical Engineering Journal 2014, 237, 88-94 102. Effect of the graphene phase presence in nanoporous S-doped carbon on photoactivity in UV and visible light M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Appl. Catal. B: Environ. 2014, 147, 842-850 103. Confined space reduced graphite oxide doped with sulfur as metal-free oxygen reduction catalyst M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2014, 66, 227-233. 104. Controllable atomistic graphene oxide model and its application in hydrogen sulfide removal Huang, L., Seredych, M., Bandosz, T.J., van Duin, A.C.T., Lu X. and Keith E. Gubbins J. Chem. Phys. 2013, 139,194707-9. 105. Reactive adsorption of SO2 on activated carbons with deposited iron nanoparticles J.Arcibar-Orozco, J.R. Rangel-Mendez, T. J. Bandosz J. Hazard. Mater 2013, 246-247, 300-309. 106. NO2 adsorption at ambient temperature on urea-modified ordered mesoporous carbon M. Florent, M. Tocci and T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2013, 63, 283-293. 107. S-doped micro/mesoporous carbon–graphene composites as efficient supercapacitors in alkaline media M.Seredych, T.J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. A 2013, 1, 11717-11727. 108. Analysis of factors affecting visible and UV enhanced oxidation of dibenzothiophenes on sulfur-doped activated carbons M. Seredych, L. Messali, T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2013, 62, 356-364. 109. Effect of confined space reduction of graphite oxide followed by sulfur doping on oxygen reduction reaction in neutral electrolyte M. Seredych, J-C. Idrobo, T.J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. A. 2013, 1, 7059-7067. 110. Aminated graphite oxides and their composites with copper-based metal–organic framework: in search for efficient media for CO2 sequestration Y.Zhao, M. Seredych, Q. Zhong, T J. Bandosz ACS Adv. 2013, 3, 9932-9941. 111. Interactions of NO2 with Zr-based MOF: effects of the size of organic linkers on NO2 adsorption at ambient conditions. A. Ebrahim, B. Levasseur, T.J. Bandosz ACS Adv. Mater. Interf. 2013, 28, 168-174. 112. Structural and optical characterization of Zn(OH)2 and its composites with graphite oxides.

Page 17 of 73 S.Z. Islam , T. Gayden, A. Moussawi, L. Shi, M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz , R. Alfano Opt. Lett. 2013, 38, 962-964. 113. Superior Performance of Copper Based MOF and Aminated Graphite Oxide Composites as CO2 Adsorbents at Room Temperature Y. Zhao, M. Seredych. Q. Zhong, T.J. Bandosz ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2013, 5 , 4951–4959. 114. Reactive adsorption of hydrogen sulfide on visible light photoactive zinc (hydr)oxide/graphite oxide and zinc (hydr)oxychloride/graphite oxide composites O. Mabayoje, M. Seredych, T. J. Bandosz Appl. Catal. B. Environ. 2013, 132-133, 321-331. 115. Insight into the role of the oxidized graphite precursor on the properties of copper-based MOF/graphite oxide composites S. Bashkova, T.J.Bandosz Microporous Mesoporous Mater. 2013, 179, 205-211. 116. Enhanced adsorption of hydrogen sulfide on mixed zinc/cobalt hydroxides: Effect of morphology and an increased number of surface hydroxyl groups O. Mabayoje, M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2013, 405. 215-225. 117. Visible light photoactivity of sulfur and phosphorus doped nanoporous carbons in oxidation of dibenzothiophenes. M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz, T. J. Fuel 2013, 108, 846-849; DOI 10.1016/j.fuel.2012.12.064. 118. Involvement of Water and Visible Light in the Enhancement in SO2 Adsorption at Ambient Conditions on the Surface of Zinc (Hydr)oxide/Graphite Oxide Composites. M. Seredych, O. Mabayoje, and T.J. Bandosz.. Chem. Eng. J.2013, 223, 442-453: 10.1016/j.cej.2013.03.0 119. Reactive adsorption of hydrogen sulfide on visible light photoactive zinc (hydr)oxide/graphite oxide and zinc (hydr)oxychloride/graphite oxide composites, M. Oluwaniyi , M. Seredych, and T. J. Bandosz. Appl. Catal. B. 2013, 132-133,321-331. 120. Analysis of the chemical and physical factors affecting reactive adsorption of ammonia on graphene/nanoporous carbon composites. Yohann Corre, Mykola Seredych and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2013, 55,176-184. 121. Reactive adsorption of ammonia and ammonia/water on CuBTC metal-organic framework: A ReaxFF molecular dynamics simulation. Liangliang Huang, Teresa Bandosz, Kaushik L. Joshi, Adri C. T. van Duin, and Keith E. Gubbins. J. Chem. Phys.2013, 138, 034102 http://dx.doi.org: 10.1063/1.4774332. 122. Reactive adsorption of SO2 on activated carbons with deposited iron nanoparticles. Javier Arcibar-Orozco, Jose Rangel-Mendez, Teresa J. Bandosz J.Hazard Mater 2013 Feb 15;246-247:300-9. 123. Interactions of NO2 with Zr-based MOF: effects of the size of organic linkers on NO2 adsorption at ambient conditions

Page 18 of 73 Amani M. Ebrahim,, Benoit Levasseur, and Teresa J. Bandosz Langmuir 2013 , 29,168-74. doi: 10.1021/la302869m 124. Enhanced Reactive Adsorption of Hydrogen Sulfide on the Composites of Graphene/Graphite Oxide with Copper (Hydr)oxychlorides O. Mabayoje, M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2012, 4 , 3316–3324 125. ReaxFF molecular dynamics simulation of thermal stability of a Cu3(BTC)2 metal-organic framework L. Hunag, K.L. JOshi, A.C. Van Duin, T.J. Bandosz K.E. Gubbins Phys.Chem. Chem. Phys. 2012, 14, 11327-11332 126. Active pore space utilization in nanoporous carbon-based supercapacitors: Effects of conductivity and pore accessibility Mykola Seredych, Mikolaj Koscinski, Malgorzata Sliwinska-Bartkowiak, Teresa J. Bandosz J. Power Sources 2012, 220,243-252 127. Photoactivity of S-doped nanoporous activated carbons: A new perspective for harvesting solar energy on carbon-based semiconductors Teresa J. Bandosz , Juan Matos, Mykola Seredych, M.S.Z. Islam, R. Alfano Appl. Catal. A. 2012, 445-446 ,159-165. 128. Reactions of VX, GD, and HD with Zr(OH)4: Near Instantaneous Decontamination of VX. T.J. Bandosz, M. Laskoski, J. Mahle, G. Mogilevsky, G.W Peterson, J.A. Rossin, G.W. Wagner, J. Phys. Chem. C, 2012, 116, 11606–11614 129. Changes in Surface Chemistry of Carbon Materials upon Electrochemical Measurements and their Effects on Capacitance in Acidic and Neutral Electrolytes D. Hulicova-Jucakova, E. Fiset, G.Q. Lu, T.J. Bandosz ChemSusChem 2012, 5, 2188-2199 130. Removal of antibiotics from water using sewage sludge- and waste oil sludge- derived adsorbents. R. Ding, P. Zhang, M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Water. Res. 2012, 46, 4081-4090 131. Effects of the addition of graphite oxide to the precursor of a nanoporous carbon on the electrochemical performance of the resulting carbonaceous composites Mykola Seredych, Ru Chen, Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2012, 50 , 4144-4154 132. Microcalorimetric insight into the analysis of the reactive adsorption of ammonia on Cu-MOF and its composite with graphite oxide Camille Petit , Sabine Wrabetz and Teresa J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. 2012, 22 , 21443-21447 133. Mesoporous silica SBA-15 modified with copper as an efficient NO2 adsorbent at ambient conditions Benoit Levasseur, Amani M. Ebrahim, Teresa J. Bandosz J. Coll. Interf. Sci. 2012, 377 , 347-354 134. Cobalt (hydr)oxide/graphite oxide composites: Importance of surface chemical heterogeneity for reactive adsorption of hydrogen sulfide

Page 19 of 73 Oluwaniyi Mabayoje, Mykola Seredych, Teresa J. Bandosz J. Coll. Interf. Sci. 212, 378 1-9. 135. Exploring the coordination Chemistry of MOF-graphite oxide composites an their application as adsorbents Camille Petit and Teresa J. Bandosz Dalton Transactions 2012, 41, 3847-3866 136. Evaluation of GO/MnO2 composites as supercapacitors in neutral electrolytes: role of Graphite oxide oxidation level Mykola Seredych, Teresa J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. 2012, 22 , 23525-23533. 137. Towards understanding reactive adsorption of small molecule toxic gases on carbonaceous materials Teresa J. Bandosz Catalysis Today, 2012, 186, 20-28 DOI:10.1016/j.Cattod.2011.08.17y 138. Visible-light-enhanced Interactions of hydrogen sulfide with composites of zinc(oxy)hydroxide with graphite oxide and graphene, M. Seredych, O. Mabayoje, T.J. Bandosz Langmuir 2012, 28, 1337-1346. 139. Interactions of NO2 with zinc (hydr)oxide/graphene phase composites: Visible light enhanced surface reactivity Seredych, M. Mabayoje, Bandosz T. J. J. Phys. Chem. C, 2012, 116, 2527-2535. 140. Zinc (Hydr)Oxide/ Graphene-Oxide and Graphene Composites : Formation of New Surface Chemistry and Enhancement in Electrical Conductivity. M. Seredych, O. Mabayoje, M.M. Koleśnik, V. Krstić,T.J. Bandosz J. Mater.Chem. 2012, 22 , 7970-7978. 141. Reactive Adsorption of Acidic gases on MOF/graphite oxide composites C. Petit, B. Levasseur, B. Mendoza and T. J. Bandosz Micro. Meso. Mat. 2012, 154 , 107-112. 142. Interactions of NO2 with Amine Functionalized SBA-15: Effects of synthesis route B. Levasseur , A. Ebrahim, T.J. Bandosz. Langmuir 2012, 28 , 5703–5714. 143. Synthesis of hollow ellipsoidal silica nanostructures using a wet-chemical etching approach Henan Zhang, Yi Zhou, Yueru Li, Teresa J. Bandosz, Daniel L. Akins J. Coll. Interface Sci. 212, 375 , 106-111. 144. Spent coffee-based activated carbon: Specific surface features and their importance for H2S separation process Karifala Kante, Cesar Nieto-Delgado, J. Rene Rangel-Mendez, Teresa J. Bandosz Journal of Hazardous Materials, 212, 201–202, 141–147. 145. Role of phosphorus in carbon matrix in desulfurization of diesel fuel using adsorption process Mykola Seredych, Chi Tang Wu, Patrice Brender, Conchi O. Ania,, Cathie Vix- Guterl, Teresa J. Bandosz Fuel 2012, 92,318–326

Page 20 of 73 146. Manganese oxide and graphite oxide/MnO2 composites as reactive adsorbents of ammonia at ambient conditions Mykola Seredych, Teresa J. Bandosz Microporous and Mesoporous Materials 2012. 150, 55–63 147. Toward understanding reactive adsorption of ammonia on Cu-MOF/graphite oxide nanocomposites C. Petit, L. Huang, J. Jagiello, J. Kenvin, K.E. Gubbins, T.J. Bandosz Langmuir 2011, 27, 13043-51 148. Interactions of NO2 at ambient temperature with cerium-zirconium mixed oxides supported on SBA-15 B. Levasseur, A.M. Ebrahim, J, Burres, T. J. Bandosz J Hazard Mater. 2011, 197, 294-303. 149. Effect of Graphite Features on the Properties of Metal–Organic Framework/Graphite Hybrid Materials Prepared Using an in Situ Process Camille Petit, Barbara Mendoza, Deanna O’Donnell, and Teresa J. Bandosz, Langmuir 2011, 27,10234–10242. 150. Copper-modified activated carbons as adsorbents of NO under ambient conditions. B. Levasseur, E. Gonzalez-Lopez, T J. Bandosz Adsorption Science and Technology 2011, 29, 831-845. +4 151. Role of Zr cations in NO2 adsorption on Ce1-xZrxO2 mixed oxides at ambient conditions Benoit Levasseur , Amani Ebrahim , and Teresa J. Bandosz Langmuir 2011, 27, 9379-9386. DOI: 10.1021/la201338 152. Changes in graphite oxide texture and chemistry upon oxidation and reduction and their effect on adsorption of ammonia Mykola Seredych, Joseph A. Rossin and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2011, 4 , 4391-4402. DOI:10.1016/j.carbon.2011.06.032 153. Template-free synthesis of silica ellipsoids Henan Zhang, Teresa J. Bandosz and Daniel L. Akins Chem. Comm. 2011, 47, 7791-7793 154. Removal of dibenzothiophenes from model diesel fuel on sulfur rich activated carbons M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Applied Catalysis B; Environmental 2011, 106, 133-141. 155. Effect of reduction treatment on copper modified activated carbons on NOx adsorption at room temperature Benoit Levasseur, Eugene Gonzalez-Lopez, Joseph A. Rossin, and Teresa J. Bandosz Langmuir 2011, 27, 5354-5365 156. Synthesis, characterization and adsorption properties of MIL(Fe) - graphite oxide composites: Exploring the limits of materials’ fabrication C. Petit and T.J. Bandosz Adv. Function. Mater. 2011, 21, 2108-2117. 157. Enhancement in Dibenzothiophene Reactive Adsorption from Liquid Fuel via Incorporation of Sulfur Heteroatoms to the Nanoporous Carbon Matrix

Page 21 of 73 M. Seredych, M. Khine, T. J. Bandosz ChemSusChem 2011, 4 , 139-147. 158. Effect of silver nanoparticles deposited on micro/mesoporous activated carbons on retention of NOx at room temperature S. Bashkova, D. Deoki, T J. Bandosz J. Coll. Interface Sci. 2011, 354, 331-340 159. Reactive adsorption of penicillin on activated carbons Conchi O. Ania, Joaquina G. Pelayo, Teresa J. Bandosz Adsorption 2011, 17, 421-429 . 160. Reactive Adsorption of Hydrogen Sulfide on Graphite oxide/Zr(OH)4 composites M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Chemical Eng. J. 2011, 166 , 1032-1038. 161. Investigation of the enhancing effects of sulfur and/or oxygen functional groups of nanoporous carbons on adsorption of dibenzothiophenes M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2011, 49, 1216-1224. 162. Reactive adsorption of NO2 on copper-based MOF and Graphite oxide-MOF composites Benoit Levasseur, Camille Petit and Teresa J. Bandosz ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 2010, 2, 3606-3613 163. Hydrogen Sulfide Adsorption on Metal-Organic Frameworks and Metal-Organic Frameworks / Graphite Oxide Composites C. Petit, B. Mendoza and T.J Bandosz ChemPhysChem 2010, 11,3678-3684 164. Effect of Carbon Surface Modification with Dimethylamine on Reactive Adsorption of NOx Eleni Deliyanni and Teresa J. Bandosz Langmuir 2011, 27, 1837–1843 165. Importance of carbon surface chemistry in development of iron-carbon composite adsorbents arsenate removal E. Deliyanni, T. J Bandosz J. Haz. Mat. 2011, 186, 667-674. 166. Adsorption of NO2 at room temperature on iron-containing polymer-based porous carbons S. Bashkova, T. J. Bandosz ChemSusChem. 2011, 4 ,404–412 167. The synthesis and characterization of copper-based metal organic framework/graphite oxide composites C.Petit, J. Burress and T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2011, 49, 563-572. 168. Investigation of the Thermal Regeneration Efficiency of Activated Carbons Used in the Desulfurization of Model Diesel Fuel M. Seredych , J. Rawlins, T.J. Bandosz Ind. Chem. Eng. Res. 2011, 50, 14097-14104. 169. MOF/ Graphite oxide hybrid materials: exploring the new concept of adsorbents and catalysts

Page 22 of 73 T.J. Bandosz, C. Petit Adsorption 2011, 17, 5-16. 170. Hydrogen sulfide adsorption on metal-organic frameworks and metal-organic frameworks / graphite oxide composites C. Petit, B. Mendoza, T.J. Bandosz ChemPhysChem 2010, 11, 3678-3684 171. Reactive adsorption of ammonia on Cu-based MOF/graphene composites C. Petit, B. Mendoza, T.J. Bandosz Langmuir 2010, 26,15302-15309 172. Effects of surface features on adsorption of SO2 on graphite oxide/Zr(OH)4 composites Mykola Seredych, and Teresa J. Bandosz J. Phys. Chem. C 2010,114, 14552–14560. 173. Interactions of NO2 and NO with Carbonaceous Adsorbents Containing Silver Nanoparticles M. Seredych, S. Bashkova, R. Pietrzak, T.J. Bandosz Langmuir 2010, 26 , 9457-9464 174. Adsorption of dibenzothiophenes on activated carbons with copper and iron deposited on their surfaces Mykola Seredych, Teresa J. Bandosz Fuel Processing Technology 2010, 91, 693-701 175. Interactions of arsine with nanoporous carbons role of heteroatoms in the oxidation process at ambient conditions Mykola Seredych, Gregory W. Peterson, John Mahle, and Teresa J. Bandosz J. Phys. Chem. C 2010, 114, 6527-6533 176. Graphite oxides obtained from porous graphite: the role of surface chemistry and texture in ammonia retention at ambient conditions Mykola Seredych, Albert V. Tamashausky, and Teresa J. Bandosz Adv. Functional Mater. 2010, 20, 1670-1679 177. Adsorption of dibenzothiophenes on nanoporous carbons: identification of specific adsorption sites governing capacity and selectivity M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Energy and Fuels 2010, 24, 3352-3360 178. The role of sulfur-containing groups in ammonia retention on activated carbons Camille Petit, Karifala Kante, and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2010, 48, 654-667. 179. Combined role of water and surface chemistry in reactive adsorption of ammonia on graphite oxides M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Langmuir 2010, 26, 5491-5498 180. Specific anion and cation capacitance in porous carbon blacks Denisa Hulicova-Jurcakova, Mykola Seredych, Yonggang Jin, Gao Qing Lu, Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2010, 48, 1767-1778. 181. The effects of oxidation on the surface chemistry of sulfur-containing carbons and their arsine adsorption capacity

Page 23 of 73 Camille Petit, Gregory W. Peterson, John Mahle, and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2010, 48, 1779-1787 182. Effect of the incorporation of nitrogen to the carbon matrix on the selectivity and capacity for adsorption of dibenzothiophenes from model diesel fuel. M. Seredych, D. Hulicova-Jurcakova, and T.J. Bandosz Langmuir 2010, 26, 227-233 183. Adsorption of ammonia on graphite oxide/Al13 composites M.Seredych and T. J. Bandosz Colloids and Surfaces A. 2010, 353, 30-36. 184. Role of microporosity and surface chemistry in adsorption of 4,6- dimethyldibenzothiophene on polymer-derived activated carbons M.Seredych, Eleni Deliyanni, and Teresa J. Bandosz Fuel 2010, l89, 1499-1507 185. Revisiting the chemistry of graphite oxides and its effect on ammonia adsorption. C. Petit, M. Seredych, and T.J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. 2009, 19 , 9077-9185. 186. Adsorption of hydrogen sulfide on graphite derived materials modified by incorporation of nitrogen M. Seredych, T. B. Bandosz Mat. Chem. Phys. 2009, 113 m 946-952. 187. Combined effect of nitrogen- and oxygen-containing functional groups of microporous activated carbon on its electrochemical performance in supercapacitors Denisa Hulicova-Jurcakova, Mykola Seredych, Gao Qing Lu, Teresa J. Bandosz Advanced Functional Materials 2009, 18 ,1-10. 188. Role of graphite precursor in the performance of graphite oxides as ammonia adsorbents Mykola Seredych, Camille Petit, Albert V. Tamashausky, and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2009, 47, 445-456. 189. Nitrogen modified carbide derived carbons as adsorbents of hydrogen sulfide Mykola Seredych, Cristell Portet, Yury Gogotsi, Teresa J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2009, 330, 60-66. 190. The effects of urea modification and heat treatment on the process of NO2 removal by wood-based activated carbon S. Bashkova, and T. J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2009, 333, 97-103. 191. Graphite oxide/polyoxometalate nanocomposites as adsorbents of ammonia Camille Petit and Teresa J. Bandosz J. Phys. Chem. 2009, 113, 3800–3809 192. Textural and chemical factor affecting adsorption capacity of activated carbons in highly efficient desulfurization of diesel fuel. M. Seredych, J. Lison. U. Jans, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2009, 47, 2491 –2500. 193. Effects of surface chemistry on the reactive adsorption of hydrogen cyanide on activated carbons. Mykola Seredych, Martin van der Merwe and Teresa J. Bandosz

Page 24 of 73 Carbon 2009, 47, 2456-2465. 194. Effect of surface phosphorus functionalities of activated carbons containing oxygen and nitrogen on electrochemical capacitance Denisa Hulicova-Jurcakova, Mykola Seredych, Gao Qing Lu, N. K. A. C. Kodiweera, Phillip E. Stallworth, Steve Greenbaum, Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2009, 47 , 1576-1584. 195. Graphite oxide/AlZr polycation composites: surface characterization and performance as adsorbents of ammonia M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Materials Chemistry and Physics 2009, 117, 99-106. 196. Interactions of 4, 6- dimethyldibenzothiophene with the surface of activated carbons Eleni Deliyanni, Mykola Seredych and Teresa J. Bandosz Langmuir 2009, 25, 9302-9312. 197. On the reactive adsorption of ammonia on activated carbons modified by impregnation with inorganic compounds T.J. Bandosz, C. Petit J. Coll. Interface Science ( feature article) 2009, 338, 329-345. 198. Selective adsorption of dibenzothiophenes on activated carbons with Ag, Co and Ni species deposited on their surfaces M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Energy & Fuels 2009, 23, 3737–3744. 199. Role of surface heterogeneity in the removal of ammonia from air on micro/mesoporous activated carbons modified with molybdenum and tungsten oxides C. Petit and T. J. Bandosz Micro. Meso. Mat. 2009, 118 , 61-67. 200. MOF-graphite oxide composites: combining the uniqueness of graphene layers and framework of MOF C. Petit and T. J. Bandosz Advanced Materials 2009, 21, 4753-4757. 201. MOF-graphite oxide nancomposites: surface characterization and evaluation as adsorbents of ammonia C. Petit and T. J. Bandosz J. Mater. Chem. 2009, 19, 6521-6528. 202. Desulfurization of air at high and low H2S concentrations Y. Elsayed, M. Seredych, A. Dallas, T. J. Bandosz Chemical Engineering Journal, Environmental 2009, 155,594-602. 203. Enhanced adsorption of ammonia on metal-organic framework / graphite oxide composites: analysis of surface interactions C. Petit and T. J. Bandosz Adv. Funct. Mater. 2009, 19, 1-8

204. Investigation of factors affecting adsorption of transition metals on oxidized carbon nanotubes Z. Gao, T.J. Bandosz, A. Zhao, M. Han, J, Qiu.

Page 25 of 73 Journal of Hazardous Materials 2009, 167,357-365. 205. Adsorption/reduction of NO2 on graphite oxide/iron composites S. Bashkova, T.J. Bandosz Ind. Chem. Eng. Res. 2009, 48,10884–10891 206. Adsorption of NO2 on activated carbons modified with cerium, Lanthanum and sodium chlorides. Karifala Kante, Eleni Deliyanni, Teresa J. Bandosz, J. Hazard. Mat. 2009, 165, 357-365. 207. Role of oil derived carbonaceous phase in the performance of sewage sludge based materials as media for desulfurizaton of digester gas Karifala Kante, Jason Qiu, Zhongbin Zhao, Yu Chang, Teresa J. Bandosz Applied Surface Science 2008, 254, 2385-2395. 208. Effect of fly ash addition on the removal of hydrogen sulfide from biogas and air on sewage sludge-based composite adsorbents Mykola Seredych, Christien Strydom, Teresa J. Bandosz Waste Management 2008, 28,1983-1992. 209. Effect of ozonolysis on the pore structure, surface chemistry, and bundling of single-walled carbon nanotubes Tirandai Hemraj-Benny, Teresa J. Bandosz, and Stanislaus S. Wong J. Coll. Interface Sci. 2008, 317, 375-382 . 210. Development of surface porosity and catalytic activity in metal sludge waste oil derived adsorbents: effect of heat treatment. Karifala Kante, Jason Qiu, Zhongbin Zhao, Yu Chang, Teresa J. Bandosz Chemical Engineering Journal 2008, 138,155-165. 211. Sewage sludge/metal sludge/ waste oil composites as catalysts for desulfurization of digester gas Karifala Kante and T.J. Bandosz Energy and Fuels 2008, 22 , 389-397. 212. Role of microporosity and nitrogen functionality on the surface of activated carbon in the process of desulfurization of digester gas M. Seredych and T. J. Bandosz J. Phys. Chem. C. 2008, 11,4704-4711. 213. Activated carbon modified with aluminum-zirconium polycations as adsorbents of ammonia Camille Petit and T. J. Bandosz Micro. Meso. Mat. 2008, 114,137-147. 214. Desulfurization of digester gas on wood based activated carbons modified with nitrogen: importance of surface chemistry Mykola Seredych and T. J. Bandosz Energy and Fuels 2008, 22 , 850-855. 215. Role of microporosity and nitrogen functionality on the surface of activated carbon in the process of desulfurization of digester gas Mykola Seredych and T. J. Bandosz J. Physical Chemistry C 2008, 112,4704-4711. 216. Interactions of NO2 with sewage sludge based composite adsorbents Robert Pietrzak and T.J. Bandosz

Page 26 of 73 J. Haz.Mat. 2008, 154,946-953. 217. Investigation of the role of surface chemistry and accessibility of cadmium adsorption sites on open-surface carbonaceous materials Zhanming Gao, Teresa J. Bandosz, Zongbin Zhao, Mei Han, Changhai Liang, Jieshan Qiu Langmuir 2008, 24, 11701-1170. 218. Removal of ammonia from air on molybdenum and tungsten oxide modified activated carbons C. Petit and T. J. Bandosz Environ. Sci. Technol.2008, 42, 3033-3039. 219. Adsorption of ammonia on graphite oxide / aluminum polycation and graphite oxide/zirconium polyoxycations composites Mykola Seredych and T. J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2008, 324, 25-35 220. Surface features of exfoliated graphite/smectite composites and their importance for ammonia adsorption Mykola Seredych, Albert V. Tamashausky, and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2008, 46 ,1241-1252 221. Complexity of ammonia interactions on activated carbons modified with V2O5 Camille Pettit and Teresa J. Bandosz J.Coll. Interface Sci. 2008, 325, 310-318. 222. Surface functional groups of carbons and the effects of their chemical character, density, and accessibility to ions on electrochemical performance Mykola Seredych, Denisa Hulicova-Jurcakova, Gao Qing Lu, Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2008, 46, 1475-1488. 223. Template-derived mesoporous carbons with highly dispersed transition metals as media for reactive adsorption of dibenzothiophene Mykola Seredych and Teresa J. Bandosz Langmuir 2007, 23, 6033-6041. 224. Sewage sludge as a single precursor for carbon nanostructure/activated carbon/catalytic oxide composite Mykola Seredych and Teresa J. Bandosz Chemical Engineering Journal: Environmental 2007, 128,59-67. 225. Surface properties of porous carbons obtained from polystyrene -based polymers within inorganic templates: role of polymer chemistry and inorganic template pore structure M.Seredych, T.J, Bandosz Microporous and Mesoporous Materials2007, 100,45-54. 226. The role of water and surface acidity on the reactive adsorption of ammonia on modified activated carbons L-M Le Leuch, T.J. Bandosz, Carbon 20007, 45,568-578 (2007). 227. Removal of cationic and ionic dyes on industrial-municipal sludge based composite adsorbents M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Ind.Chem. Eng. Res. 2007, 46, 1786-1793.

Page 27 of 73 228. Tobacco Waste/Industrial Sludge Based Desulfurization Adsorbents: Effect of Phase Interactions during Pyrolysis on Surface activity M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Environ. Sci. Technol.2007, 41, 3715-3721. 229. On the mechanism of reactive adsorption of dibenzothiophene on organic waste derived carbons C.O. Ania, J.B. Parra, A. Arenillas, F. Rubiera, T.J. Bandosz, J.J. Pis Applied Surface Science 2007, 253,5899-5903. 230. Silica-polyamine based-carbon composite adsorbents as media for effective hydrogen sulfide adsorption/oxidation Teresa J. Bandosz, Mykola Seredych, Jesse Allen, Jessica Wood, Edward Rosenberg Chem. Mater. 2007, 19, 2500-2511. 231. Desulfurization of digester gas on industrial sludge-derived adsorbents M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Energy and Fuels 2007, 21, 858-866 (2007). 232. Removal of hydrogen sulfide from biogas on sludge derived adsorbents W. Yuan, T. J. Bandosz Fuel 2007, 86, 2736-2746. 233. Removal of ammonia by graphite oxide via its intercalation and reactive adsorption Mykola Seredych and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2007, 45, 2130-2132. 234. Interactions of ammonia with the surface of microporous carbon impregnated with transition metal chlorides Camille Petit, Christopher Karwacki, Greg Peterson, Teresa J. Bandosz J Phys. Chem.2007, 111,12705-12714. 235. Role of graphite oxide (GO) and polyaniline (PANI) in NO2 reduction on GO- PANI composites Mykola Seredych, Robert Pietrzak and Teresa J. Bandosz Ind. Chem. Eng. Res. 2007, 46, 6925-6936. 236. Role of aluminum oxycations in retention of ammonia on modified activated carbons Camille Pettit and Teresa J. Bandosz. J. Phys. Chem. 2007, 111,16445-16452. 237. Reactive adsorption of NO2 at dry conditions on sewage sludge derived materials Robert Pietrzak, Teresa J. Bandosz Environ. Sci. Technol. 2007, 41,7516-7522. 238. Mechanism of ammonia retention on graphite oxides: role of surface chemistry and structure Mykola Seredych and Teresa J. Bandosz J.Phys.Chem. 2007, 111,15596-15604. 239. Activated carbons modified with sewage sludge derived phase and their application in the process of NO2 removal R. Pietrzak and T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2007, 45, 2537-2546.

Page 28 of 73 240. Highly mesoporous carbons obtained using a dynamic template method Conchi O. Ania and T. J. Bandosz Microporous and Mesoporous Materials 2006, 89,315-324. 241. Adsorption of ethylmethylamine vapor by activated carbon filters Yehya El-Sayed, Teresa J. Bandosz, Hilda Wullens and Peter Lodewyckx Ind. Chem. Eng. Res. 2006, 45, 1441-1445. 242. Metal-loaded polystyrene based activated carbons as dibezothiophene removal media via reactive adsorption. Conchi.O. Ania and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2006, 44,2404-2412. 243. Photooxidation of dibenzothiophene on TiO2/hectorite thin films layered catalyst Jamie Robertson and T. J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Science 2006, 299,125-135. 244. Metal-loaded carbonaceous adsorbents templated from porous clay heterostructures Danh Nguyen-Tanh and Teresa J. Bandosz Microporous and Mesoporous Materials 2006, 92,47-55. 245. Municipal sludge- industrial sludge composite desulfurization adsorbents: synergy enhancing the catalytic properties Teresa J. Bandosz and Karin Block Environ. Sci. Technol. 2006, 40, 3378-3383. 246. Desulfurization of digester gas on catalytic carbonaceous adsorbents: complexity of interactions between the surface and components of the gaseous mixture Mykola Seredych and Teresa J. Bandosz Ind. Chem. Eng. Res. 2006, 45,3658-3665. 247. Removal of hydrogen sulfide on composite sewage sludge-industrial sludge- based adsorbents Teresa J. Bandosz and Karin Block. Ind. Chem. Eng. Res. 2006, 45,3666-3672. 248. Sodium on the surface of activated carbons as a factor enhancing reactive adsorption of dibenzothiophene Conchi O. Ania and Teresa J. Bandosz Energy and Fuels 2006, 20,1076-1080. 249. Effect of pyrolysis temperature and time on catalytic performance of sewage/industrial sludge based composite adsorbents. Teresa J. Bandosz and Karin Block Appl. Catal.: Environmental 2006, 67, 77-85. 250. Removal of copper on composite sewage sludge/industrial sludge-based adsorbents: The role of surface chemistry M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz J. Coll. Interface Sci. 2006, 302,379-388. 251. On the utilization of industrial/municipal sludges as a source of desulfurization adsorbents T. J. Bandosz Annales Univeristatis Mariae Curie-Sklodowska: Chemia 2006, LXI 3-24 .

Page 29 of 73 252. Role of surface oxygen groups in incorporation of nitrogen to activated carbons via ethylmethylamine adsorption Y. Elsayed and T.J. Bandosz Langmuir 2005, 21, 1282-1289. 253. Adsorption of hydrogen sulfide on motmorillonites modified with iron D. Nguyen-Tanh and T .J. Bandosz Chemosphere 2005, 59,343-353. 254. Oxidative desorption of methyl mercaptan on nitrogen enriched bituminous coal- based activated carbon A. Bagreev, J.A. Menendez, I. Dukhno, Y. Tarasenko, and T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2005, 43,208-210. 255. A study of ignition of metal impregnated carbons: the influence of oxygen content in the activated carbon matrix M. Van Der Merwe, and T. J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2005, 282, 102-108. 256. Catalytic properties of activated carbon surface in the process of adsorption/oxidation of methyl mercaptan S. Bashkova, A. Bagreev, and T.J. Bandosz Catalysis Today 2005, 99, 323-328. 257. Desulfurization of digester gas: prediction of activated carbon bed performance at low concentrations of hydrogen sulfide A. Bagreev, S. Katikaneni, S. Parab and T. J. Bandosz Catalysis Today 2005, 99, 329-337. 258. Activated carbons with metal containing-clay binders as adsorbents of hydrogen sulfide Danh Nguyen-Tanh and T.J.Bandosz Carbon 2005, 43, 359-367. 259. Effect of adsorbent composition on H2S removal on sewage sludge-based materials enriched with carbonaceous phase Adil Ansari, A. Bagreev and T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2005, 43, 1039-1048 260. Heterogeneity of adsorption energy of water, methanol and diethyl ether on activated carbons: effect of porosity and surface chemistry V. Gun’ko And T.J. Bandosz Adsorption 2005, 11, 97-102. 261. Predictions of H2S breakthrough capacity of activated carbons at low concentrations of hydrogen sulfide A. Bagreev. W. Kuang and T.J. Bandosz Adsorption 2005, 11,461-466. 262. Importance of structural and chemical heterogeneity of activated carbon surfaces for adsorption of dibenzothiophene. Conchi O. Ania and Teresa J. Bandosz Langmuir 2005, 21,7752-7759 263. Enrichment of the performance of activated carbons as municipal odor removal media by addition of sewage sludge derived phase Evilambia Sioukri and Teresa J. Bandosz

Page 30 of 73 Environ. Sci. Technol.205, 39, 6217-6224. 264. On the mechanism of hydrogen sulfide removal from moist air on catalytic carbonaceous adsorbents Andrey Bagreev and Teresa J.Bandosz Ind. Chem. Eng. Res.2005, 44, 530-53. 265. Inorganic-organic phase arrangement as a factor affecting gas phase desulfurization on catalytic carbonaceous adsorbents Adil Ansari and Teresa J. Bandosz Environ. Sci. Technol.2005, 39,6225-6230. 266. Efficient desulfurization adsorbents obtained by pyrolysis of sewage sludge derived fertilizer modified with spent mineral oil A. Bagreev and T. J. Bandosz Environ. Sci. Technol. 2004, 38, 345-351. 267. Bituminous coal- based activated carbons modified with nitrogen as adsorbents of hydrogen sulfide A. Bagreev, J.A. Menendez, I. Dukhno, Y. Tarasenko, and T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2004, 42, 469-476. 268. Surface properties of porous carbon obtained from polystyrene sulfonic acid- based organic salts D. Hines, A. Bagreev, and T. J. Bandosz Langmuir 2004, 20, 3388-3397. 269. Adsorption of valeric acid from aqueous solutions on activated carbons; role of surface basic sites Y. EI-Sayed, and T. J. Bandosz J. Coll. Interface Sci. 2004, 273, 64-72. 270. Heterogeneity of sewage sludge derived materials as a factor governing their performance as adsorbents of acidic gases A. Bagreev, S. Bashkova, B. Reznik, V. Zibat, and T J. Bandosz Proceeding of Conference on Characterization of Porous Solids-6 (Studies in Surface Science and Catalysis 144), F. Rodriguez-Reinoso et al., Ed. Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2003, p.217-224. 271. An IGC and T A study of acetaldehyde adsorption on activated carbons Y. EI-Sayed and T.J. Bandosz Proceeding of Conference on Characterization of Porous Solids-G, F. Rodriguez- Reinoso, Ed. Amsterdam, 2003, p.49-254. 272. Role of surface chemistry in adsorption of phenol on activated carbons I.I. Salame and T. J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2003, 264,307-312. 273. Adsorption/Oxidation of CH3SH on activated carbons containing nitrogen S. Bashkova, A. Bagreev, and T. J. Bandosz Langmuir 2003, 19, 6115-6121. 274. Effect of transition metal cation on adsorption of H2S on modified pillared clays D. Nguyen-Thanh and T.J. Bandosz J. Phys. Chem.2003, 107, 5812-5817. 275. Heterogeneity of adsorption energy of water, methanol and diethyl ether on activated carbons: effect of porosity and surface chemistry

Page 31 of 73 V. Gun'ko, T. J. Bandosz Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2003, 5, 2096-2103. 276. Effect of increased basicity of activated carbon surface on valeric acid adsorption from aqueous solution. Y. EI-Sayed, T.J. Bandosz Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2003, 5,4892-4898. 277. Dual role of water in the process of methyl mercaptan adsorption on activated carbons A. Bagreev, S. Bashkova, and T J. Bandosz Langmuir 2002, 18, 8553-8559. 278. On the adsorption/oxidation of hydrogen sulfide on unmodified activated carbon at ambient conditions T.J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Science 2002, 246 ,1-20. 279. A Role of sodium hydroxide in the process of hydrogen sulfide adsorption/oxidation on caustic-impregnated activated carbons A. Bagreev and T.J. Bandosz Ind. Eng. Chem. Res.2002, 41, 672-679. 280. Adsorption of SO2 on activated carbons: the effect of nitrogen functionality and pore sizes A.Bagreev, S. Bashkova, and T.J. Bandosz Langmuir 2002, 18 , 1257-1264. 281. Sewage sludge derived materials as adsorbents for H2S and SO2 A.Bagreev, S. Bashkova, D.C. Locke and T.J. Bandosz Fundamentals of Adsorption -7, K. Kaneko, H. Kanoh, Y. Hanzawa Eds., IK International, Chiba, Japan, p. 239-246, 2002. 282. Acetaldehyde adsorption on nitrogen-containing activated carbons Y. El-Sayed, T.J. Bandosz, Langmuir 2002, 18 , 3213-3218. 283. Adsorption of methyl mercaptan on activated carbons. S. Bashkova, A. Bagreev, T.J. Bandosz Environ Sci. Technol.2002, 36, 2777-2782. 284. Acidic cloud episodes in the Northen Colorado Rockies: inadvertent weather modification? E. E. Hindman, M. C. Meyer, D. Gedzelman, T. J. Bandosz J. Wea. Modif. 2002, 34, 18-30. 285. H2S adsorption/oxidation on materials obtained using sulfuric acid activation of sewage sludge derived fertilizer A. Bagreev and T. J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2002, 252, 188-194 286. Interactions of water, methanol and diethyl ether molecules with the surface of oxidized activated carbon I.I.Salame, T. J. Bandosz Molecular Physics 2002, 100, 2041-2048. 287. Study of regeneration of activated carbons used as H2S adsorbents in water treatment plants.

Page 32 of 73 A. Bagreev, H. Rahman, T.J. Bandosz Advances in Environmental Research 2002, 6 , 303-311. 288. Influence of organics on structure of water adsorbed on activated carbons V. V. Turov, V.M. Gun'ko, R. Leboda, J. Skubiszewska-Zieba, D. Palijczuk" T.J.Bandosz, Tomaszewski, and S. Zietek J. Colloid Interface Sci.2002, 253, 23-34. 289. Effect of surface characteristics on adsorption of methyl mercaptan on activated carbons S. Bashkova, A. Bagreev, T. J. Bandosz Ind. Chem. Eng. Res.2002, 41,4346-4352. 290. Sewage sludge derived materials as efficient adsorbents for removal of hydrogen sulfide A. Bagreev, S. Bashkova, D.C. Locke and T.J. Bandosz Environ. Sci. Technol. 2002, 35, 1537-143. 291. Thermal regeneration of activated carbon previously used as hydrogen sulfide adsorbent A. Bagreev, H. Rahman, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2001, 39,1319-1326. 292. Adsorption of SO2 on sewage sludge-derived materials S. Bashkova, A. Bagreev, D.C. Locke and T.J. Bandosz Environ. Sci. Technol. 2001, 35, 3263-3269. 293. Water in porous carbon J.K. Brennan, T.J. Bandosz, K.T. Thomson, K.E. Gubbins Colloids and Surface A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects2001, 187- 188, 539-568. 294. H2S adsorption/oxidation on adsorbents obtained from pyrolysis of sewage sludge-derived fertilizer using zinc chloride activation A. Bagreev, D. C. Locke, T.J. Bandosz Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 2001,40, 3502-3510. 295. Study of diethyl ether adsorption on activated carbons using IGC at finite concentration. I.I.Salame, T. J. Bandosz. Langmuir 2001, 17, 4967-4972. 296. Surface chemistry of activated carbons: combining the results of temperature programmed desorption, Boehm and potentiometric titrations I.I. Salame, T. J. Bandosz. J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2001, 240, 252-258. 297. pH of the activated carbon surface as an indication for its suitability for removal of hydrogen sulfide from wet air streams A. Bagreev, F. Adib, and T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2001, 39,1897-1905. 298. H2S adsorption/oxidation on unmodified activated carbons: importance of prehumidification A. Bagreev, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2001, 39, 2303-2311.

Page 33 of 73 299. Pore structure and surface chemistry of adsorbents obtained by pyrolysis of sewage sludge-derived fertilizer A. Bagreev, D.C. Locke and T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2001, 39,1971-1978. 300. A study of acetaldehyde adsorption on activated carbon Y. El-Sayed, T.J. Bandosz J. Coll. Interface Sci. 2001, 242, 44-51. 301. Adsorption/oxidation of hydrogen sulfide on nitrogen containing activated carbons F. Adib, A. Bagreev, T. J. Bandosz Langmuir 2000, 16, 1980-1986. 302. Comparison of surface features of two wood based activated carbons I.I. Salame, T. J. Bandosz Ind. Eng.Chem. Res. 2000, 39, 301-306. 303. Analysis of the relationship between H2S removal capacity and surface properties of unmodified activated carbons. F. Adib, A. Bagreev, T.J. Bandosz Environmental Science and Technology 2000, 34, 686-692. 304. Unmodified versus caustics impregnated carbons for control of hydrogen sulfide emissions from sewage treatment plants T.J. Bandosz, A. Bagreev, F. Adib. A. Turk Environmental Science and Technology 2000, 34,1069-1074. 305. Surface functionality and porosity of activated carbons obtained from chemical activation of wood. H. Benaddi, T.J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, J.A. Schwarz, J.N. Rouzaud, D. Legras, F. Beguin Carbon 2000, 38, 669-674. 306. Adsorption of water and methanol on micro- and mesoporous wood-based activated carbons I.I. Salame, T. J. Bandosz Langmuir 2000, 16 , 5435-5440. 307. On the possibility of regeneration of unimpregnated activated carbons used as hydrogen sulfide adsorbents F. Adib, A. Bagreev, and T.J. Bandosz Ind. Eng. Chem. Res 2000, 39, 2439-2446 308. Study of hydrogen sulfide adsorption on activated carbons using inverse gas chromatography at infinite dilution A. Bagreev, T.J. Bandosz J. Phys.Chem. 104 (2000) 8841-8846. 309. Study of H2S adsorption and water regeneration of coconut-based activated carbon A. Bagreev, H.Rahman, and T.J. Bandosz Environ. Sci. Tech. 2000, 34, 4587-4592. 310. Wood-based activated carbons as adsorbents of hydrogen sulfide: a study of adsorption and water regeneration process

Page 34 of 73 A. Bagreev, H. Rahman, T.J. Bandosz Ind.Eng.Chem. Res. 2000, 39, 3849-3855. 311. Biofiltering action on hydrogen sulfide by virgin activated carbon in sewage treatment. T. J. Bandosz, S. Askew, W. Kelly, A. Bagreev, F. Adib, A. Turk Water Science and Technology 2000, 42, 399-401. 312. Effect of pore structure and surface chemistry of virgin activated carbon on removal of hydrogen sulfide T. J. Bandosz Carbon 1999, 37, 483 – 491. 313. Experimental study of water adsorption on activated carbons I. Salame, T. J. Bandosz Langmuir 1999, 15, 587-593. 314. A molecular model for adsorption of water on activated carbons: comparison of simulation and experiment C. L. McCallum, T. J. Bandosz, S. C. McGrother, E. A. Muller, K. E. Gubbins Langmuir 1999, 15, 533-544. 315. Study of water adsorption on activated carbons with different degrees of surface oxidation I. Salame, T. J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Sci. 1999, 210, 367-374. 316. An improved model for adsorption of water and aqueous mixtures on activated carbons T. J. Bandosz, K. E. Gubbins, C. L. McCallum, S. C. McGrother, E. A. Muller, S. L. Sowers Fundamentals of Adsorption-6, (ed. F. Meunier), Elsevier, Paris, 1998,p.213-218. 317. Effect of surface characteristics of wood based activated carbons on removal of hydrogen sulfide F. Adib, A. Bagreev, T.J. Bandosz Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 1999, 214, 407-415. 318. Revisiting the effect of surface chemistry on adsorption of water on activated carbons I.I. Salame, T. J. Bandosz Journal of Physical Chemistry 1999, 103, 3877-3884. 319. Effect of pH and surface chemistry on the mechanism of H2S removal by activated carbons. F. Adib, A. Bagreev, T.J. Bandosz Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 1999, 216, 360-369. 320. Initial heats of H2S adsorption on activated carbons: effect of surface features A. Bagreev, F. Adib, T. J. Bandosz Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 1999, 219, 327-332. 321. Evaluation of surface properties of exhausted carbons used as H2S adsorbents in sewage treatment plants T. J. Bandosz, Q. Le Carbon 1998, 36, 39-44.

Page 35 of 73 322. Porosity and surface acidity of SiO2-Al2O3 xerogels T. J. Bandosz, C. Lin, J. A. Ritter Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 1998, 217, 347-353. 323. Molecular modeling of selective adsorption from mixtures T. J. Bandosz, F. J. Blas, K. E. Gubbins, C. L. McCallum, S. C. McGrother, S. L. Sowers, L. F. Vega MRS Symposium Proceedings, “Recent Advances in Catalytic Materials” (N. M. Rodriguez, S. L. Soled and J. Hrbek, eds.), Vol. 497, p. 231, 1998. 324. Structural and acidic properties of taeniolites modified by introduction of Fe+3 species T.J. Bandosz Polish J. Chem. 1998, 72,1202-1214. 325. Virgin activated carbons as adsorbents of hydrogen sulfide T.J. Bandosz Fundamentals of Adsorption-6, (ed. F. Meunier); Elsevier, Paris, ,p.635-640, 1998. 326. Heterogeneity of pillared clays studied by adsorption of SF6 at temperatures near ambient J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, J. A. Schwarz Langmuir 1997, 13, 1010-1014. 327. Effect of mineral host on surface acidity of hydroxy-Cr intercalated clays. T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz Clays and Clay Minerals 1997, 45, 110-113. 328. Preparation and characterization of the pore structure and acidity of hydroxy-Cr Smectites T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz Polish Journal of Chemistry 1997, 71, 637-650. 329. Changes in acidity of Fe pillared/delaminated smectites on heat treatment T. J. Bandosz, K. Cheng J. Colloid Interface Sci. 1997, 191, 456-463. 330. Determination of the pore size distribution and network connectivity in microporous solids by adsorption measurements and Monte Carlo simulation V. Lopez-Ramon, J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, N. A. Seaton Langmuir 1997, 13, 4435-4445. 331. Analysis of silica surface heterogeneity using butane and butene adsorption data T. J. Bandosz Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 1997, 193, 127-131. 332. The determination of surface changes in active carbons by potentiometric titration and water vapor adsorption T. J. Bandosz, B. Buczek, T. Grzybek, J. Jagiello Fuel 1997, 76, 1409-1417. 333. Thermodynamically consistent analysis of silica surface heterogeneity using alkane. J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz Fundamentals of Adsorption, (ed.M.D.LeVan) Kluwer: Boston, MA; p.417, 1997.

Page 36 of 73 334. Characterization of microporous carbons by using molecular simulation to analyze the adsorption of molecules of different sizes V. Lopez-Ramon, J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, N. A. Seaton Characterization of Porous Solids-IV, (ed. J. Roquerol, et al.): The Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, UK, p. 73-80, 1997. 335. Sorption and desorption of lithium ions from activated carbons A. Seron, H. Benaddi, F. Beguin, E. Frackowiak, J.L. Bretelle, M. C. Thiry, T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello and J. A. Schwarz Carbon 1996, 34, 481. 336. Surface chemical heterogeneity of pillared hydrotalcites K. Putyera, J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz and J. A. Schwarz Royal Chem. Soc. Faraday Trans. 1996, 92, 1243. 337. Characterization of microporous carbons using adsorption at near ambient temperatures T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz Langmuir 1996, 12 ,2837-2842. 338. Study of nanocomposites obtained by carbonization of different organic precursors within taeniolite matrices T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz Clays and Clay Minerals 1996, 44, 237. 339. Adsorption of sulfur hexafluoride and propane at temperatures near ambient on pillared clays T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data 1996, 41, 880-884. 340. Changes in acidity of pillared taeniolites on heat treatment T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz Royal Chem. Soc. Faraday Trans. 1996, 92, 4631-4636. 341. Pore structure of carbon-mineral nanocomposites and derived carbons obtained by template carbonization T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz Chemistry of Materials 1996, 8, 2023-2029. 342. Effect of template constrains on adsorption properties of synthetic carbons prepared within the gallery of layered double hydroxides. K. Putyera, T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz Carbon 1996, 34,1559-1569. 343. A study of acidity and structure of hydroxy-Cr intercalated bentonites T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz J. Colloid Interface Sci. 1996, 182,570-577. 344. Characterization of the structure and surface acidity of hydroxy-chromium taeniolites T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz J. Physical Chemistry 1996, 100 , 15569-15574. 345. Effect of surface chemistry on sorption of water and methanol on activated carbons T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, A. Krzyzanowski and J. A. Schwarz Langmuir 1996, 12, 6480-6486.

Page 37 of 73 346. Hydrotalcite-like structures as molecular containers for preparation of microporous carbons K. Putyera, T. J. Bandosz, J Jagiello and J. A. Schwarz Applied Clay Science 1995, 10, 177. 347. Structural and adsorption properties of carbons synthesized within taeniolite matrices. T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, K. Putyera, and J. A. Schwarz, J-N Rouzaud, I. Ben- Maimoun, F. Beguin J. Chem. Soc. Faraday Trans. 1995, 91, 493. 348. Determination of proton affinity distributions for chemical systems in aqueous environments using stable numerical solution of the adsorption integral equation J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz Journal of Colloid Interface Science 1995, 172,341-346. 349. Micropore structure development in Poly(Sodium-4-Styrenesulfonate) derived carbons. K. Putyera, J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, J. A. Schwarz Carbon 1995, 33, 1047. 350. Micropore structure of template derived carbons using adsorption of gases with different molecular diameters. J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz J. Chem. Soc. Faraday Trans. 1995, 91,2929 351. Sieving properties of carbons obtained by template carbonization of polyfurfuryl alcohol within mineral matrices T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, K. Putyera, and J. A. Schwarz Langmuir 1995, 11, 3964-3969. 352. Surface acidity of pillared taeniolites in terms of their proton affinity distributions T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz Journal of Physical Chemistry 1995, 99, 13522. 353. Adsorption near ambient temperatures of methane, carbon tetrafluoride and sulfur hexafluoride on commercial activated carbons. J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data 1995, 40,1288. 354. Sorption properties of carbon composite materials formed from layered minerals K. Putyera, T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello and J. A. Schwarz Clays and Clay Minerals 1994, 42, 1. 355. A study of carbon microstructure using inverse gas chromatography J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, and J. A. Schwarz Carbon 1994, 32, 668. 356. Study of carbon smectite composites and carbons obtained by insitu carbonization of polyfurfuryl alcohol T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera, J. Jagiello, and J. A. Schwarz Carbon 1994, 32, 659. 357. Carbon surface characterization in terms of its acidity constant distribution J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, and J. A. Schwarz Carbon 19994, 32,1026-1028.

Page 38 of 73 358. Adsorption energy and structural heterogeneity of activated carbons J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz in Characterization of Porous Solids III (ed. J. Roquerol et al.) p. 679, Elsevier, Amsterdam 1994. 359. Pore structures of carbon-smectite nanocomposites T. J. Bandosz, S. Gomez-Salazar, K. Putyera, and J. A. Schwarz Microporous Materials 19994, 3, 177. 360. Characterization of acidity of pillared clays by proton affinity distribution and DRIFT spectroscopy T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, K. Putyera, and J. A. Schwarz J.Chem. Soc. Faraday Trans. 1994, 90, 3573. 361. Effect of surface chemical groups on energetic heterogeneity of activated carbons T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello and J. A. Schwarz Langmuir 1993, 9, 2518-2522 . 362. Application of inverse gas chromatography to the study of the surface properties of modified layered minerals T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera, J. Jagiello and J. A. Schwarz Microporous Materials 1993, 1, 73. 363. Characterization of the surfaces of activated carbons in terms of their acidity constant distributions T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, C. Contescu and J. A. Schwarz Carbon 1993, 31,1193-445. 364. Application of inverse gas chromatography at infinite dilution to study the effects of oxidation of activated carbons J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz and J. A. Schwarz Carbon 1992, 30, 63. 365. Thermodynamic study of high-pressure adsorption of methane on activated carbons: the effect of oxidation on pore structure and adsorption energy heterogeneity J. Jagiello, P. Sanghani, T. J. Bandosz and J. A. Schwarz Carbon 19992, 30, 507. 366. Inverse gas chromatography study of activated carbons: the effect of controlled oxidation on microstructure and surface chemical functionality J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz and J. A. Schwarz Journal of Colloid Interface Science 19992, 151,433. 367. A comparison of methods to asses surface acidic groups on activated carbons T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello and J. A. Schwarz Analytical Chemistry 19992, 64, 892. 368. Inverse gas chromatography study of modified smectite surfaces T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, B. Andersen and J. A. Schwarz Clays and Clay Minerals 1992, 40, 306. 369. Chemical and structural properties of clay minerals modified by inorganic and organic material T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, K. A. G. Amankwah and J. A. Schwarz Clay Minerals 19992, 27, 435.

Page 39 of 73 370. A Study of the activity of chemical groups on carbonaceous and model surfaces by means of infinite dilution chromatography J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz and J. A. Schwarz Chromatographia 1992, 33, 441. 371. Studies of the chemical character of the surface of smectite intercalated with hydroxy-aluminum oligocations T. Bandosz, J. Jagiello and M. Zyla Chemia Stosowana 1991, 33, 189. 372. Structural parameters of intercalated smectite in the light of sorption and other physico-chemical studies T. Bandosz Bulletin of The Polish Academy of Sciences (Chemistry) 1991, 39, 167. 373. A comparative study of the main properties of montmorillonites intercalated with aluminum and chromium hydroxycations M. Zyla and T. Bandosz Polish Journal of Chemistry 1991, 65, 674. 374. Heat of adsorption and adsorption energy of ammonia on smectite intercalated with hydroxy-chromium oligocations as an index of the chemical character of the surface T. Bandosz, J. Jagiello and M. Zyla Przemysl Chemiczny 1991. 375. Sorption properties, porosity and surface character of the intercalated smectites T. Bandosz and M. Zyla Zeszyty Naukowe AGH (1991). 376. Physicochemical properties of the montmorillonite from Milowice intercalated with hydroxy-chromium oligocations T. Bandosz and M. Zyla Chemia Stosowana 1989, 33, 47. 377. Montmorillonite from Milowice intercalated with hydroxy-chromium oligocations as a new vapour and gas adsorbent M. Zyla and T. Bandosz Przemysl Chemiczny, 1989. 378. Smectites intercalated with metal-hydroxy cations. Synthesis, physico-chemical properties and applications T. Bandosz Wiadomosci Chemiczne 1988, 42, 707. 379. A study of activity of the kaolin in the aspect its application as a rubber filler T. Bandosz, S. Mocydlarz, St. Olkiewicz, A. Otowska, P. Wyszomirski and M. Zyla Chemia Stosowana 1987, 31,229. 380. Montmorillonite from Milowice intercalated with hydroxy-aluminum oligocations as vapour and gas adsorbent M. Zyla and T. Bandosz Mineralogia Polonica 1987, 18, 30. 381. Physico-chemical properties of the new sorbent - montmorillonite from Milowice intercalated with hydroxy-aluminum oligocations

Page 40 of 73 T. Bandosz, A. Gawel and M. Zyla Chemia Stosowana 1987, 31, 217. 382. A Study of the Polish sludged kaolin P. Wyszomirski, T. Bandosz and M. Zyla Gospodarka Surowcami Mineralnymi 1986, 2 . b) Articles in E-publications None c) Abstracts (such as for conferencesm if refereed): Total 168 presentations 1. Adsorption for... Beyond adsorption: role of carbon porosity in ORR and CO2RR Teresa J. Bandosz XVII meeting of Brazilian Materials Research Society, Natal, Brazil, Sept 16-20, 2018 2. Importance of Carbon Porosity for Energy Related Applications Teresa J. Bandosz X international Symposium on the Physics and Chemistry of Carbon and Nanoenergetic Materials, Almaty , Kazakhstan, Sept 12-14, 2018. 3. Analysis of factors affecting low concentration formaldehyde removal on porous carbon materials Giacomo de Falco and Teresa J. Bandosz 3rd Ibero-American Congress on Adsorption, Gijon, Spain, Sept. 3, 2018 4. Emphasizing the role carbon pores in electrocatalysis Teresa J. Bandosz World Carbon Conference 2018, Madrid, July 1-6, 2018 5. Adsorption for.. beyond adsorption Teresa J. Bandosz International Conference on Functional Carbons, Taipei, Taiwan, Nov.1-4, 2017. 6. Smart textiles consisting of MOF/g-C3N4 composites: Rapid detection/detoxification of nerve chemical warfare agents Dimitrios Giannakoudakis, Teresa J. Bandosz Workshop on Multifunctional Porous materials, Athens, Oct. 9-11, 2017 7. Toxic gas sensing on nanoporous carbons Nikolina Travlou and Teresa J. Bandosz XXVI International Materials Research Congress Cancun, Mexico August 20-25, 2017 8. CO2 electrochemical reduction on porous carbon catalysts doped with nitrogen Wanlu Li, Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2017, Melbourne, Australia, July 23-28, 2017 9. Beyond Adsorption: A New look at Nanoporous carbons Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2017, Melbourne, Australia, July 23-28, 2017 10. Efficient adsorption/ detection of ammonia on n-doped resin-derived porous carbons Nikolina Travlou, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2017, Melbourne, Australia, July 23-28, 2017

Page 41 of 73 11. CO2 interactions with porous carbons: is the surface stable at ambient conditions? Teresa J. Bandosz Challenges for Carbon-based Nanoporous Materials (6CBNM) July 19-21, 2017 Nagano, Japan 12. CO2 interactions with porous carbons: is the surface stable at ambient conditions? Teresa J. Bandosz Challenges for Carbon-based Nanoporous Materials (6CBNM)July 19-21, 2017 Nagano, Japan 13. CO2 interactions with porous carbons: Is the surface stable at ambient conditions? M. Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz IX Conference on Separation Science and Technology Albufeira, Portugal. March 5-10, 2017. 14. Exploring CO2 electroreduction on nanoporous carbons WanLu Li, T.J. Bandosz International Conference on Water Energy and Environment 2017,Feb. 28-March 3, 2017, Sharjah, UAE 15. Beyond adsorption: New perspectives for Nanoporous Carbons T.J. Bandosz TLMC=2, Termas de Chile, Chile, Nov 14-Nov 19, 2016 16. MOF/Graphene composites as gas separation media T.J. Bandosz Graphchina 2016, Qingdao, China, September 21-24, 2016 17. Beyond Adsorption: The Effect of Sulfur Doping on Emerging Applications of Nanoporous Carbons Teresa J. Bandosz Physics and chemistry of carbon materials / Nanoengineering and Nano-energy materials -2016, September, 12-16, 2016, Almaty , Kazakhstan. 18. Beyond adsorption: a new look at nanoporous carbons T.J. Bandosz III Workshop on Adsorption Catalysis and Porous Materials, August 29-31 2016, Bogota, Colombia. 19. Composites of nanoporous carbon with graphite oxide or graphitic carbon nitride: specific synergy of surface properties. T. J. Bandosz, Plenary Lecture III Workshop on Adsorption Catalysis and Porous Materials, August 29-31 2016, Bogota, Colombia 20. Beyond adsorption: a new look at nanoporous carbons T.J. Bandosz Beyond Adsorption Workshop, July 16, 2016, New York City, USA 21. Carbon-based materials for the sustainable catalysis and photocatalysis J. Matos,, H. García, A.Borodzinski, T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2016, College Station, PA, July 11-15, 2016. 22. Toxic gas sensing on nanoporous Carbons N. Travlou, M. Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2016, College Station, PA, July 11-15, 2016.

Page 42 of 73 23. Photoactivity of g-C3N4/S-doped porous carbon composite: synergistic effect of composite formation M. Seredych, S. Los, D.A. Giannakoudakis, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz. Carbon 2016, College Station, PA, July 11-15, 2016. 24. Exploring CO2 reduction on heteroatom doped nanoporous carbons W. Li, M.Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2016, College Station, PA, July 11-15, 2016. 25. Mesoporous graphitic carbon nitride-based nanospheres as visible-light active chemical warfare agents decontaminant D. A. Giannakoudakis, M. Seredych, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, T. J. Bandosz 6th International Colloid and Interface Science Conference, Berlin, Germany June 19-22 2016. 26. Toxic gas sensing on nanoporous Carbons N. Travlou, M. Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz Fundamentals of Adsorption 12, May 29-June 3, 2016, Friedrichshaffen, Gremany. 27. g-C3N4 and its oxidized counterpart composites with MOF as visible-light active chemical warfare agent decontaminants G.A. GIannakoudakis, N. Travlou, M. Seredych, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz Fundamentals of Adsorption 12, May 29-June 3, 2016, Friedrichshaffen, Germany. 28. Graphite oxide/ferrihyrite composites for preferential oxidation of CO in the excess of hydrogen. E. Moretti, J.Arcibar-Orozco, T.J. Bandosz, E. Roxriguez-Castellon, M. Moreno- Recio, A. Talon, L. Storaro IBERCON 2016, Torremolinos, Spain, April 20-22, 2016 29. Applicacion de aeriogeles de carbon on S and sus composiites de oxido de grafito como catalizadores en la reduction de oxigeno M. Seredych, K. Laszlo, E. Rodriguez-Castellon, T.J. Bandosz IBERCON 2016, Torremolinos, Spain, April 20-22, 2016 30. Exploring CO2 reduction on heteroatom doped nanoporous carbons WanLu Li, Mykola Seredych, Teresa J. Bandosz 251 ACS National Meeting, San Diego , CA, March 14-17, 2016. 31. Beyond Adsorption: Nanoporous Carbons as Visible Light Active Catalysts and Gas Sensors T. J. Bandosz, M. Seredych, N.E.Travlou, E. Rodriguez-Castellon. 2nd United Arab Emirates Conference on Pure and Applied Chemistry Sharjah, UAE, March 3-5, 2016. 32. Zirconium (hydr)oxide/graphite oxide/AgNPs composites: Role of surface features in reactive adsorption of mustard gas and organophosphate surrogates’ vapors. D. A. Giannakoudakis, T. J. Bandosz. Pacificchem 2015, Honolulu, Hawaii, December 15-18, 2015. 33. Activated carbon-based gas sensors: effects of surface features on the sensing mechanism. N. A. Travlou, M. Seredych, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, T. J. Bandosz, Pacificchem 2015, Honolulu, Hawaii, December 15-18, 2015.

Page 43 of 73 34. CWA surrogates decontamination on metal (hydr)oxide/ graphite oxide adsorbents: Engaging chemical reactivity, porosity, conductivity J. A. Arcibar-Orozco, D. A. Giannakoudakis, T. J. Bandosz. Pacifichem 2015, Honolulu, Hawaii, December 15-18, 2015. 35. Peculiar properties of mesoporous synthetic carbon/graphene phase composites and their effect on supercapacitive performance. Innovation with Carbon Materials. M. Seredych, E. Rodríguez-Castellón, T.J. Bandosz, Dresden, Germany, July 12- 17, 2015 36. The effects of activated carbon surface features on the reactive adsorption of carbamazepine and sulfamethoxazole Lilja Nielsen, Mark J. Biggs, William Skinner, Teresa J. Bandosz L. Nielsen , T.J Bandosz. 5th World Colloid and Interface ScienceConference, Amsterdam, June 21-24, 2015. 37. Nanoporous carbons as gas sensors: Combining sensitivity with protection. Kavindra Singh, Nikolina A. Travlou, Svetlana Bashkova, Enrique Rodríguez- Castellón and Teresa J. Bandosz. Characterization of Porous Materials 7. Delray Beach , FL. May 3-7, 2015 38. Visible light activity of nanoporous carbons: The effect of surface chemistry and porous structure. Mykola Seredych, Conchi Ovin Ania, Enrique Rodriguez- Castellon, Jose Maria Montenegro, and Teresa J. Bandosz.. Characterization of Porous Materials 7. Delray Beach , FL. May 3-7, 2015 39. Nanoengineered MOF-Based Adsorbents. Teresa J. Bandosz. II Workshop on Adsorption, Catalysis and Porous Materials (II WACPM), Cartagena, Colombia, April 28-29, 2015. 40. Iron hydroxide/GO Multifunctional Reactive Adsorbents: Engaging Chemistry, Porosity, Photoactivity, and Conductivity Into Decontamination Process Javier Arcibar-Orozco, Dimitrip Gannakoudakis, Teresa J. Bandosz CB Filtration strategies and Multifunctional Materials development workshop, October 21-22, 2014, Arlington, Virginia. 41. New copper/GO based material as an efficient oxygen reduction catalyst: The role of unique Cu/rGO architecture Conchi O. Ania, Mykola Seredych, Enrique Rodriguez-Castellon, and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2014 Conference Jeju Island, South Korea, June 28-July 4, 2014 42. Visible light driven water splitting on metal free nanoporous carbon promoted by chromophoric functional group Conchi O. Ania, Mykola Seredych, Enrique Rodríguez-Castellón, Teresa J. Bandosz Carbon 2014 Conference Jeju Island, South Korea, June 28-July 4, 2014 43. Visible light photoactivity of sulfur doped nanoporous carbons: Investigation of the effects of surface chemistry Mykola Seredych and Teresa J. Bandosz Carbocat VI, Trondheim, Norway, June 22-25, 2014. 44. Effects of structural and Chemical heterogeneity of zinc hydroxide/graphite oxide/AuNP on the Reactive adsorption of Hydrogen sulfide D. Giannakoudakis, T.J. Bandosz

Page 44 of 73 4th World Colloid Conference: Surface design and Engineering. Madrid Spain, June 15-18, 2014; 45. MOF/GO composites: Exploring the concept of new separation media Teresa J. Bandosz 4th World Colloid Conference: Surface design and Engineering. Madrid Spain, June 15-18, 2014; Plenary lecture 46. Effect of Confined Space Reduction of Graphite Oxide followed by Sulfur Doping on Oxygen Reduction in Neutral Electrolyte M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz CESEP 2013, Mülheim a.d. Ruhr – Germany, September 23-26, 2013 47. Removal of Pharmaceuticals From Water On Sewage Sludge Based Composite Adsorbents Pengfei Zhang, Rui Ding, Mykola Seredych, and Teresa J. Bandosz EUROMAT 2013, September 8-13, Sevilla, Spain 48. Superior performance of MOF/aminated oxide composites as adsorbents of CO2. Y. Zhao, M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz PPM 2013, September 3-7, Cesme, Turkey 49. Pore space utilization in nanoporous carbon-based supercapacitors: Effects of conductivity and pore accessibility. M. Seredych and T. J. Bandosz. Carbon 2013, July 14-19, 2013, Copacabana, Rio de Janerio, Brazil. 50. Effect of confined space reduction of graphite oxide followed by sulfur doping on oxygen reduction reaction in neutral electrolyte M. Seredych and T. J. Bandosz. Carbon 2013, July 14-19, 2013, Copacabana, Rio de Janerio, Brazil. 51. Effect of iron nanoparticles anchored on activated carbon in the desulfurization of model diesel fuel J. Arcibar-Orozco, JR Rangel-Mendez, T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2013, July 14-19, 2013, Copacabana, Rio de Janerio, Brazil. 52. Superior performance of MOF/aminated oxide composites as adsorbents of CO2. Y. Zhao, M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz XXII ICCDU, June 23-25, 2013 Alexandria, Viginia, 53. Factors affecting desulfurization of liquid fuels on carbonaceous materials Teresa J. Bandosz 2nd workshop on Adsorption, Universidad de Los Andes, Bogota, Colombia, May 25-31, 2013 54. Reactive Adsorption of Sulfur containing gases on Zn(OH)2 graphite oxide composites . Mykola Seredych, Oluwaniyi Mabayoje, and Teresa J. Bandosz. Hybrid Materials 2013, Sorrento, Italy, March 3-7, 2013. 55. Towards understanding reactive adsorption of toxic gases on carbonaceous adsorbents. Plenary lecture. Teresa J. Bandosz 2-nd South American Conference of Adsorbents and Adsorption. San Luis, Argentina, February 20-23, 2013.

Page 45 of 73 56. Towards understanding reactive adsorption of toxic gases on carbonaceous adsorbents. Invited lecture. T. J. Bandosz. Federal University of Ceara, Fortaleza, Brazil, January 23, 2013. 57. Visible-Light-Enhanced Interactions of Hydrogen Sulfide with Composites of Zinc (Oxy)hydroxide with Graphite Oxide and Graphene M. Seredych, O. Mabayoje, T. J. Bandosz ISSHAC-8, August 29-Sept. 3, 2012. 58. Effects of Graphene-Based Phase Addition to the Precursor of the Nanoporous Carbon on Electrochemical Performance M. Seredych and T. J. Bandosz Carbon 2012, Krakow, July 14-19, Krakow, Poland. 59. Visible-Light-Enhanced Interactions of Hydrogen Sulfide with Composites of Zinc (Oxy)hydroxide with Graphite Oxide and Graphene M. Seredych, O. Mabayoje, T. J. Bandosz IBA-1, Recife, Brazil, May 5-May 10, 2012. 60. Graphite oxide/ Zn(OH)2 composites as adorbents of sulfur containing gases CPP-6, Delray Beach, Florida March 29-April 2 , 2012 M. Seredych, O. Mabayoje, T. J. Bandosz 61. Visible-Light-Enhanced Interactions of Hydrogen Sulfide with Composites of Zinc (Oxy)hydroxide with Graphite Oxide and Graphene. M. Seredych, O. Mabayoje, T. J. Bandosz Applications of Carbons in Energy, Am.C.S. Workshop, Atlanta, GO, March 29-30, 2012 62. Effects of graphene-based phase addition to the nonporous carbon precursors on electrochemical performance of the resulting carbonaceous composites M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Applications of Carbons in Energy, Am.C.S. Workshop, Atlanta, GO, March 29-30, 2012 63. Keynote Presentation: Towards the Most Efficient Diesel Oil desulfurization Adsorbents: Combining the Effects of Porosity and Surface Chemistry of Activated Carbons. M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz. Carbon for Energy and Environment Protection Conference ( CESEP 2011, September 25-29, 2011, Vichy France 64. MOF/Graphene composites: Exploring the limits of materials preparation C.Petit, Benoit Levasseur, Barbara Mendoza and T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2011, July 23-28, Shanghai, China. 65. Adsorption of acidic gases on MOF/Graphite oxide composites C.Petit, Benoit Levasseur, Barbara Mendoza and T.J. Bandosz COPS-IX, Dresden Germany, June 5-8, 2011. 66. Combined Role of Surface Chemistry and Porosity in the Performance of Carbons as Supercapacitors 1st International Symposium on Chemistry of Energy Conversion and Storage (Germany; February 2011). 67. Towards understanding Reactive Adsorption on Carbonaceous materials

Page 46 of 73 Teresa J. Bandosz CARBOCAT-4, Dalian, China, November, 2010. 68. MOF-Graphene composites: Exploring the new concept of adsorbents and Catalysts for removal of toxic gases C.Petit, T.J. Bandosz Decon 2010 Conference, Lake Louis, Canada, September 28-30, 2010. 69. MOF/Graphene composites: exploring a new concept of adsorbents and catalysts C. Petit, T.J. Bandosz Abstracts Brazilian Meeting of Chemical Engineers and Brazilian Adsorption Society, Iguassu Fall, Brazil, September 19-22, 2010 70. Importance of Porosity and Surface chemistry for deep desulfurization of diesel fuel M. Seredych and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2010, Clemson, SC, July 11-16, 2010 71. Activated carbons modified with sulfur as adsorbents of arsine C. Petit, G. Peterson, J. Mahle and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2010, Clemson, SC, July 11-16, 2010 72. MOF/Graphene composites: exploring a new concept of adsorbents C. Petit and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2010, Clemson, SC, July 11-16, 2010 73. MOF/Graphene composites as adsorbents of toxic gases C. Petit and T.J. Bandosz Abstracts of FOA-9, Awaji Island, Japan, May 22-25, 2010 74. The effect of the porosity and surface acidity of activated carbons on their adsorption capacity and selectivity for highly efficient desulfurization Mykola Seredych, Jakub Lison, Urs Jans and Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts Pacific basin Conference on Adsorption Science and Technology, May 25-27, 2009, Singapore 75. Desulfurization of Air Stream at High and Low H2S Concentrations Yehya El-Sayed, M. Seredych, Andrew Dallas and Teresa J. Bandosz, Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2009, Biarritz, France, July 14-19, 2009 76. Reactive Removal of Penicillin From Aqueous Media On Activated Carbons J.G. Pelayo, C.O. Ania, T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2009, Biarritz, France, July 14-19, 2009 77. Role of Carbon Surface Chemistry in Ultradeep Desulfurization on Activated Carbon Mykola Seredych, Jakub Lison, Urs Jans and Teresa J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2009, Biarritz, France, July 14-19, 2009 78. MOF-Graphite Oxide Nanocomposites: Surface Characterization and Evaluation as Adsorbents of Ammonia Camille Petit and Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts f ARO Workshop, Savannah, GA, Jeûné 22-25, 2009 79. The Effects of Urea Modification and Heat Treatment on the Process of NO2 Removal by Wood-based Activated Carbon S. Bashkova, and T. J. Bandosz Abstracts of Porous Materials Workshop 2009, Ne Brunswick, June 23-26, 2009

Page 47 of 73 80. Role of Carbon Surface Chemistry in Ultradeep Desulfurization on Activated Carbon Mykola Seredych, Jakub Lison, Urs Jans and Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts if Porous Materials Workshop 2009, New Brunswick, June 23-26, 2009 81. MOF-Graphite Oxide Nanocomposites: Properties And Application For Gas Separation Camille Petit and Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of Porous Materials Workshop 2009, Ne Brunswick, June 23-26, 2009 82. MOF-Graphite Oxide Nanocomposites: Surface Characterization and Evaluation as Adsorbents of Ammonia Camille Petit and Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of ICCM-17, International Conference on Composite Materials, Honolulu HI, July 26-August 1, 2009 83. Role of Graphite Precursor in the Performance of Graphite Oxides as Ammonia Adsorbents Mykola Seredych, Camille Petit, Albert V. Tamashausky, and Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of Chemical and Biological Defense Science and Technology Conference, New Orleans, Nov 17-21, 2008 84. Modified Graphite Oxides as Adsorbents of Hydrogen Sulfide Mykola Seredych and Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of Chemical and Biological Defense Science and Technology Conference, New Orleans, Nov 17-21, 2008 85. Removal of Ammonia on Graphite Oxides Mykola Seredych, Teresa J. Bandosz, Abstracts of IEP2008, Kyoto, Japan, June 1-5, 2008 86. Removal of ammonia from air on molybdenum and tungsten oxide modified activated carbons Camille Petit, Teresa J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2008, Nagasaki Japan, July 14-20, 2008. 87. Understanding Reactive Adsorption of Small Molecule Toxic Gases on Carbonaceous Materials: Experiments And Simulation Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of Chemical Biological Filtration group meeting, Arlington, Sept. 9-12, 2008 88. The Role of Water and Surface Acidity on the Reactive Adsorption of Ammonia on Modified Activated Carbons Camille Petit and Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of Fundamentals of Adsorption 9 Conference, Gardine Naxos, Italy, May 25-31, 2007 89. Template-Derived Mesoporous Carbons with Highly Dispersed Transition Metals as Media for Reactive Adsorption of Dibenzothiophene M. Seredych and T. J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts Carbon 2007 Conference, Seattle, July 15-20, 2007 90. Reactive Adsorption of Ammonia on Modified Activated Carbons Camille Petit and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts Carbon 2007 Conference, Seattle, July 15-20, 2007

Page 48 of 73 91. Removal of NO2 on Modified Carbonaceous Adsorbents Robert Pietrzak and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts Carbon 2007 Conference, Seattle, July 15-20, 2007 92. Removal of small molecule gases on modified activated carbons. Camille Petit and Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of Carbons for Energy Storage and Environmental Protection Conference (CESEP 2), Krakow, Poland, Sept. 2-6, 2007. 93. Sewage Sludge as Media for Development of Desulfurization Adsorbents Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of the Conference of Pacific Rim Society of Chemical Engineers, Auckland, New Zealand September 16-20, 2007. 94. Desulfurization of Digester Gas on Carbonaceous Adsorbents: Effects of Surface Chemistry and Moist Air Exposure M.Seredych and T.J. Bandosz, Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2006, Aberdeen, Scotland, July 16-21, 2006 95. Removal of Ammonia on Modified Activated Carbons: Role of Surface Features L.M. Le Leuch and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2006, Aberdeen, Scotland, July 16-21, 2006 96. Desulfurization of Air on Sewage Sludge/Industrial Sludge Based Adsorbents T.J. Bandosz and K. Block Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2006, Aberdeen, Scotland, July 16-21, 2006 97. Hydrodechlorination of Chlorobenzene using Transition Metal-Doped Carbons from Polystyrene based organic Salts. S.A. Barata. C.O. Ania, J.Vital, A.M. Ramos, J.C. Bordado, J. Parra, I.M. Fonseca, T.J.Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2006, Aberdeen, Scotland, July 16-21, 2006 98. Industrial/Municipal sludge based composite adsorbents as media for heavy Metal and Dye Removal M. Seredych, T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2006, Aberdeen, Scotland, July 16-21, 2006 99. Chemically modified nanoporous carbons obtained using template Carbonization Method Conchi O. Ania and Teresa J. Bandosz In Fundamentals of Adsorption 7; P. Levellyn, Ed., Elsevier, Amsterdam 2006. 100. Industrial/municipal sludge based composite adsorbents as media for heavy metal and dye removal M. Seredych and T. J. Bandosz Proceedings of ACS 231 Annual Meeting, Fuel Division, 51, 2006. 101. Desulfurization of digester gas on carbonaceous adsorbents: effect of surface chemistry and moist air exposure M. Seredych and T. J. Bandosz Proceedings of ACS 231 Annual Meeting, Fuel Division, 51, 2006. 102. High porosity carbonaceous adsorbents templated from Porous clay heterostructure D. Nguyen-Tanh and T. J. Bandosz Proceedings of ACS 231 Annual Meeting, Fuel Division, 51, 2006.

Page 49 of 73 103. Desulfurization of air on sewage sludge/industrial sludge based adsorbents T. J. Bandosz and K. Block Proceedings of ACS 231 Annual Meeting, Fuel Division, 51, 2006. 104. Removal of DBT on metal containing carbonaceous adsorbents C. O. Ania and T. J. Bandosz Proceedings of ACS 231 Annual Meeting, Fuel Division, 51, 2006. 105. Adsorption of Dibenzothiophene from Liquid Phase by Activated Carbons Conchi O. Ania and Teresa J. Bandosz. ACS Annual meeting, San Diego, March 13-18, 2005.ACS Proceedings, Fuel Div. 2005; 50 (1). 106. Mesoporous carbons obtained from polystyrene sulfonic acid-based organic salts by template carbonization method. ACS Proceedings, Fuel Div. 2005; 50 (1). Conchi O. Ania and Teresa J. Bandosz. ACS Annual meeting, San Diego, March 13-18, 2005.ACS Proceedings, Fuel Div. 2005; 50 (1). 107. Chemically Modified Nanoporous Carbons Obtained Using Template Carbonization Method Conchi O. Ania and T. J. Bandosz In Fundamentals of Adsorption 7; Aux the Provence, France, May 24-27, 2005 108. Adsorption of dibenzothiophene from liquid phase on activated carbons Conchi O. Ania and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts Carbon 2005, Gyeongjy, Korea, July3-7, 2005. 109. Mesoporous Carbons obtained from Polystyrene sulfonic acid-based organic salts by template carbonization method. Conchi O. Ania and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts Carbon 2005, Gyeongjy, Korea, July3-7, 2005. 110. Temple synthesis of metal-loaded mesoporous carbons obtained from polystyrene-based organic salts. Conchi O. Ania and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts Carbon for Energy Storage and Environment Protection, Orleans, France, October 2-6, 2005. 111. Carbonaceous materials as desulfurization media Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts NATO advanced Research Workshop, Kiev, Ukraine, September 14-17, 2005. 112. Heterogeneity of Adsorption Energy of Water, Methanol and Diethyl Ether on Activated Carbons: Effect of Porosity and Surface Chemistry V. Gun’ko And T.J. Bandosz Abstracts of Fundamentals of Adsorption 8, Sedona, Arizona, May 22-28, 2004 113. Predictions of H2S Breakthrough Capacity of Activated Carbons at Low Concentrations of Hydrogen Sulfide Bagreev. W. Kuang And T.J. Bandosz Abstracts of Fundamentals of Adsorption 8, Sedona, Arizona, May 22-28, 2004 114. Catalytic Properties of Activated Carbon Surface in The Process of Adsorption/Oxidation of Methyl Mercaptan

Page 50 of 73 S. Bashkova, A. Bagreev, And T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2004, Providence, RI, July11-16, 2004 115. Role of Surface Chemistry in Adsorption of Ethylmethylamine on Activated Carbons Y. El-Sayed, T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2004, Providence, RI, July11-16, 2004 116. Sewage Sludge Enriched Carbonaceous Materials as Media For Gas Phase Desulfurization Ansari, A. Bagreev, T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2004, Providence, RI, July11-16, 2004 117. Nitrogen Enriched Activated Carbons as Adsorbents and Catalysts in Desulfurization Technologies Andrey Bagreev, Svetlana Bashkova, Teresa Bandosz, Angel Menendez, Irina Dukhno, Yuriy Tarasenko Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2004, Providence, RI, July11-16, 2004 118. Highly Porous Activated Carbons Derived From Poly (Styrene Sulfonic Acid) Based Organic Salts Deon Hines, Andrey Bagreev, Teresa J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Carbon 2004, Providence, RI, July11-16, 2004 119. Heterogeneity of sewage sludge derived materials as a factor governing their performance as adsorbents of acidic gases A. Bagreev, S. Bashkova, B. Reznik, V. Zibat, and T J. Bandosz Proceeding of Conference on Characterization of Porous Solids-6 (Studies in Surface Science and Catalysis 144), F. Rodriguez-Reinoso et al., Ed. Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2003, p.217-224. 120. Sewage Sludge Based Carbonaceous Materials for Gas Phase Desulfurization: Role of Surface Heterogeneity Adil Ansari, Andrey Bagreev , Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of 5th International Symposium on Surface Science and Catalysis, Gdansk, Poland August 29- Sept 3, 2004. 121. Desulfurization From Gaseous Phase on Carbonaceous Adsorbents- Plenary Talk Teresa J. Bandosz Abstracts of 9Th International Symposium on Particle Size Analysis, Environmental Protection and Powder Technology, Balatonfured, September 5-7, 2004. 122. An IGC and TA study of acetaldehyde adsorption on activated carbons Y. El-Sayed and T.J. Bandosz Proceeding of Conference on Characterization of Porous Solids-G, F. Rodriguez- Reinoso, Ed. Amsterdam, 2003, p.49-254. 123. On the Role of Water in the Process of Methyl Mercaptan Adsorption on Activated Carbons S. Bashkova, A Bagreev, T. J. Bandosz Abstracts 3rd Pacific Basin Conference on Adsorption Science and Technology, Gyangju, South Korea, May 25- 29, 2003 124. Bituminous Coal Based Activated Carbons Modified with Nitrogen as Adsorbents of Hydrogen Sulfide

Page 51 of 73 A. Bagreev, J.A. Mednendez, I. Dukhno, Y. Tarasenko, and T. J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts Carbon Conference, Oviedo, Spain July 6-July 10, 2003. 125. Heterogeneity of Sewage Sludge Derived Materials as a Factor Governing their Performance as Adsorbents of Acidic Gases A. Bagreev, S. Bashkova, B. Reznik, V. Zibat, and T J. Bandosz Abstracts of Conference on Characterization of Porous Solids-6, Alicante, Spain, May 8-12, 2002. 126. Acetaldehyde Adsorption on Activated Carbons Y. El-Sayed and T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts Carbon 2002, Beijing, China, Sept 15-20, 2002. 127. Adsorption of Methyl Mercaptan on Activated Carbons S. Bashkova, A. Bagreev, and T J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts Carbon 2002, Beijing, China, Sept 15-20, 2002. 128. An IGC and TA Study of Acetaldehyde Adsorption on Activated Carbons Y. El-Sayed and T.J. Bandosz Abstracts of Conference on Characterization of Porous Solids-6, Alicante, Spain, May 8-12, 2002. 129. Sludge Derived Materials as Efficient Adsorbents of Hydrogen Sulfide A.Bagreev, S. Bashkova, D. Locke, T.J. Bandosz Abstracts Fundamentals of Adsorption 7, Nagasaki, May 20-25, 2001. 130. Sewage Sludge-Derived Materials as Adsorbents for H2S Removal Andrey Bagreev, Svetlana Bashkova, David C. Locke, and Teresa J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts 25th Biennial Conference on Carbon. Lexington, KY, July 15- 20, 2001 131. Diethyl Ether Adsorption on Activated Carbons; IGC study Issa I. Salame and Teresa J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts 25th Biennial Conference on Carbon. Lexington, KY, July 15- 20, 2001 132. Sewage Sludge-Derived Material as Adsorbents of SO2 Svetlana Bashkova, Andrey Bagreev, David C. Locke, and Teresa J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts 25th Biennale Conference on Carbon. Lexington, KY, July 15- 20, 2001. 133. The early Ignition of Coconut Carbon in Comparison with the Peat Carbon M. Van Der Merwe, T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts 25th Biennial Conference on Carbon. Lexington, KY, July 15- 20, 2001 134. Sludge Derived Materials as Efficient Adsorbents of Hydrogen Sulfide Removal A.Bagreev, S. Bashkova, D. Locke, T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts 4th International Symposium on Surface Heterogeneity and Catalysis, Krakow, Poland, August 25-31, 2001. 135. Effect of surface chemistry and pore structure on adsorption of water and CH3OH on activated carbons I.I. Salame, T.J.Bandosz Proceedings of the Second Conference on Adsorption Science and Technology, D. Do, Ed. World Scientific, Hong-Kong, 2000, 61-65.

Page 52 of 73 136. Effect of surface chemistry on the performance of unimpregnated activated Carbons as H2S Adsorbents. F. Adib, A. Bagreev, T.J. Bandosz Proceedings of the Second Conference on Adsorption Science and Technology, D. Do, Ed. World Scientific, Hong-Kong 2000, .56-60. 137. Effect of Surface Chemistry and Pore Structure on Adsorption of Water and CH3OH on Activated Carbons I.I. Salame, T.J.Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Eurocarbon, Berlin 9-13 July 2000. 138. Surface Features of Unimpreganted Activated Carbons Governing their Performance as H2S Adsorbents. F. Adib, A. Bagreev, T.J. Bandosz Extended Abstracts of Eurocarbon, Berlin 9-13 July 2000. 139. Investigation of a Wintertime Acidic Cloud Episode in the Northern Colorado Rockies. M.C. Meyer, E.E. Hindman, S. D. Gedzelman, T. J. Bandosz Abstracts of 13th International Conference on Clouds and Precipitation, Reno, NV, 14-18 August 2000. 140. Biofiltering Action on Hydrogen Sulfide by Virgin Activated Carbon in Sewage Treatment. T. J. Bandosz, S. Askew, W. Kelly, A. Bagreev, F. Adib, A. Turk Abstracts of the 7th International Conference of the Israel Society for Ecology and Environmental Quality Sciences on Environmental Challenges for the Next Millennium, Jerusalem, Israel, June 13-18, 1999. 141. Virgin Versus Caustic-Impregnated Carbons for Control of Hydrogen Sulfide Emissions from Sewage Plants Teresa J. Bandosz, Andrey Bagreev, Foad Adib, and Amos Turk Extended Abstracts of 24th Biennial Conference on Carbon, Charleston, June 11-16, 1999 142. Surface Chemical Functionality of Activated Carbons And Adsorption of Polar Molecules at Low Relative Pressure Extended Abstracts of 24th Biennial Conference on Carbon, Charleston, June 11-16, 1999 143. Effect of Surface Characteristics of Wood Based Activated Carbons on Adsorption of Hydrogen Sulfide Extended Abstracts of 24th Biennial Conference on Carbon, Charleston, June 11-16, 1999 144. Virgin Activated Carbons as Adsorbents of Hydrogen Sulfide T. J. Bandosz Abstracts of 6th International Conference on Fundamental of Adsorption, Gienes, France, May 23-27, 1998. 145. An Improved Model for Adsorption of Water and Aqueous Mixtures on Activated Carbons T. J. Bandosz, K. E. Gubbins, C. L. McCallum, S. C. McGrother, E. A. Muller, S. L. Sowers

Page 53 of 73 Abstracts of 6th International Conference on Fundamental of Adsorption, Gienes, France, May 23-27, 1998. 146. Sorption of Water on Activated Carbons at Low Relative Pressure I. Salame, T. J. Bandosz Abstracts of 72nd ACS Colloid and Surface Science Symposium, Penn State, June 21-24, 1998. 147. Sorption of Water on Activated Carbons at Low Relative Pressure I. Salame, T. J. Bandosz Abstracts of Third International Symposium on Effects of Surface Heterogeneity in Adsorption and Catalysis on Solids Torun, Poland, August 9-16, 1998. 148. An improved model for adsorption of water and aqueous mixtures on activated carbons T. J. Bandosz, K. E. Gubbins, C. L. McCallum, S. C. McGrother, E. A. Muller, S. L. Sowers Fundamentals of Adsorption-6, (ed. F. Meunier) Elsevier, Paris, 1998,p.213-218. 149. Molecular modeling of selective adsorption from mixtures T. J. Bandosz, F. J. Blas, K. E. Gubbins, C. L. McCallum, S. C. McGrother, S. L. Sowers, L. F. Vega MRS Symposium Proceedings, “Recent Advances in Catalytic Materials” (N. M. Rodriguez, S. L. Soled and J. Hrbek, eds.), Vol. 497, p. 231 (1998) 150. Virgin activated carbons as adsorbents of hydrogen sulfide T. J. Bandosz Fundamentals of Adsorption-6, (ed. F. Meunier); Elsevier, Paris, 1998,p.635-640 151. Characterization of microporous carbons by using molecular simulation to analyze the adsorption of molecules of different sizes V. Lopez-Ramon, J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, N. A. Seaton Characterization of Porous Solids-IV, (ed. J. Roquerol, et al.): The Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, UK, 1997, p. 73-80. 152. Study of Exhausted Carbons from Sewage Systems Teresa J. Bandosz and Quang Le Abstracts of Pacific Basin Workshop on Adsorption Science and Technology, Kazusa Academia Center, Japan, May 8-10, 1997. 153. Study of Exhausted Carbons Used for H2S Adsorption from Sewage Systems Teresa J. Bandosz and Quang Le Abstracts of The Fourth China-Japan-USA Symposium on Advanced Adsorption Separation Science and Technology, Guangzhou, China, May 13-16, 1997. 154. Heterogeneity of Pillared Clays Studied by Adsorption of Different Gases Teresa J. Bandosz, Jacek Jagiello, and James A. Schwarz Abstracts of Characterization of Porous Materials: from Angstroms to Millimeters, Princeton, New Jersey, USA, June 18-20, 1997. 155. Characterization of Exhausted carbons used for Air Purification in Sewage Systems Teresa J. Bandosz and Quang Le Extended Abstracts 23rd Biennial Conference on Carbon, State College,

Page 54 of 73 Pennsylvania, USA, July 13-18, 1997. 156. Molecular Modeling of Selective Adsorption from Mixtures T. J. Bandosz, K. E. Gubbins, F. J. Blas, S. L. Sowers, C. L. McCallum, S. C. McGrother, L. F. Vega Proceedings of MRS Annual Meeting, Boston, December 1997. 157. Thermodynamically Consistent Analysis of Silica Surface Heterogeneity Using Alkane J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz Extended Abstracts of Fifth International Conference on Fundamentals of Adsorption, Pacific Grove, USA, May 13-18, 1995. 158. Heterogeneity of Pillared Clays Studied by Adsorption of Different Gases J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, J. A. Schwarz Extended Abstracts of Second International Symposium on Effects of Surface Heterogeneity in Adsorption and Catalysis on Solids. Poland-Slovakia, September 4-10, 1995 159. Surface Chemical Heterogeneity of Pillared Hydrotalcites K. Putyera, J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, J. A. Schwarz Extended Abstracts of Second International Symposium on Effects of Surface Heterogeneity in Adsorption and Catalysis on Solids. Poland-Slovakia, September 4-10, 1995 160. Surface Chemical Heterogeneity of Pillared Hydrotalcites K. Putyera, J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, J. A. Schwarz Extended Abstracts of Second International Symposium on Effects of Surface Heterogeneity in Adsorption and Catalysis on Solids. Poland-Slovakia, September 4-10, 1995 161. A Study of Carbons Obtained by Carbonization of Polymer Inside Clay Mineral Matrices T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, S. Gomez-Salazar, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz Extended Abstracts of Carbon'94 Conference Granada, Spain, July1994. 162. A study of Surface Chemical Character of Carbons Derived from Polystyrene Sulfonate J. Jagiello, K. Putyera, T. J. Bandosz and J. A. Schwarz Extended Abstracts of Carbon'94 Conference Granada, Spain, July1994. 163. Structural and Adsorption Properties of Carbon Films Synthesized within Layered Silicates T. J. Bandosz, F. Beguin, I. Ben Maimoun, J. Jagiello, K. Putyera J. N. Rouzad and J. A. Schwarz Extended Abstracts of Carbon'94 Conference Granada, Spain, July 1994. 164. Micropore Structure Development in Poly(Sodium-4-Styrenesulfonate) Derived Activated Carbons K. Putyera, T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello and J. A. Schwarz

Page 55 of 73 Extended Abstracts of Carbon'94 Conference Granada, Spain, July 1994. 165. Adsorption Energy and Structural Heterogeneity of Activated Carbons, J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz Proceeding of COPS-III Marseille, France, May 1993. 166. Energy of Gas Adsorption on Activated Carbons: Effects of Pore Structures and Surface Chemistry J. Jagiello, T. J. Bandosz, and J. A. Schwarz Proceedings of 1993 Workshop on Adsorbent carbons Lexington, Kentucky, June 1993. 167. Hydrotalcite-Like Structures as Molecular Containers for Preparation of Microporous Carbons K. Putyera, T. J. Bandosz, J Jagiello and J. A. Schwarz: Extended Abstracts of Carbon'93 Conference, Buffalo, N.Y., June 1993. 168. Physico-Chemical Properties of Carbon-Smectite Materials T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello, K. Putyera and J. A. Schwarz Extended Abstracts of Carbon'93 Conference, Buffalo, N.Y., June 1993. 169. Effect of Surface Chemical Groups on Energetic Heterogeneity of Activated Carbons T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello and J. A. Schwarz: Abstracts of International Symposium Effects of Surface Heterogeneity in Adsorption and Catalysis on Solids, Kazimierz Dolny, Poland, July 1992

5. Book Reviews in Published Journals

1. Gas Adsorption Equilibrium: Experimental methods and Adsorptive Isotherms. By Jurgen U. Kelleer and Reiner Straudt (Universtat Siegen). Springer: New York 2005.xiv +442pp.$ 139.00 IBN 0-387-23597-3. Teresa J. Bandosz Journal of American Chemical Society 127, 7655 (2005).

2. The Sulfur Problem: Cleaning Up Industrial Feedstocks. By Diane Stirling (University of Glasgow). Royal Society of Chemistry: Cambridge. 2000. x+ 94 pp. 55.00 pounds. ISBN: 0-85404-541-4. (Book Review) T. J. Bandosz Journal of The American Chemical Society 123, 516 (2001).

6. Unjuried/unrefereed Publications in journals and E-publications

none

VIII. Other Scholarly Work (Exhibits Curated, Scholarly Websites etc.)

Page 56 of 73

IX. Creative Work:

1. Description of works

2. Venues of public displays or performance

3. Critical reviews

1. S. Suresh, T. J. Bandosz Removal of Formaldehyde on Carbon -Based Materials: A Review of the Recent Approaches and Findings Carbon 2018, 137, 207-221 2. T.J. Bandosz, C.O. Ania Origin and Perspectives of the Photochemical Activity of Nanoporous Carbons Advanced Science , 2018, 1800293 3. Water in porous carbon. J.K. Brennan, T.J. Bandosz, K.T. Thomson, K.E. Gubbins Colloids and Surface A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects, 2001, 187- 188 (2001) 539-568.

4. Articles or feature write-ups referring to the work

Feature articles:

1. Engineering adsorbent surfaces: Metal-organic framework/graphite oxide composites. C. Petit and T.J. Bandosz. J. Colloid Interface Sci., feature article. DOI: 10.1016/j.jcis.2014.08.026 2015 , 447, 139–151

2. On the Reactive Adsorption of Ammonia on Activated Carbons modified by Impregnation with Inorganic Compounds T.J. Bandosz, C. Petit J. Coll. Interface Science, feature article, 2009, 338, 329-345.

3. On the adsorption/oxidation of hydrogen sulfide on unmodified activated carbon at temperatures near ambient. T.J. Bandosz J. Colloid Interface Science, feature article, 2002, 246, 1-20.

Work featured at:

1. A.DePalma Secret Weapon Against the Smell of Sludge: Sludge; New York Times, February 21, 2005

Page 57 of 73 2. C. Richardson. City College Professor Uses Sludge to Suppress Sewage Smells, Daily News, Clem Richardson, February 2005 3. New York Times, February 21, 2012 Sewage’s Toxic Smell, Smothered by Coffee By S.N. Bhandoo 4. R&D Magazine Carbonized coffee grounds remove foul smells, February 22, 2012 5. NSF “News From the Field” Carbonized coffee grounds remove foul smells http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=123279&org=NSF&from=ne ws 6. Researchers develop smart fabric to neutralise nerve gas by Fiona Haran 18 September 2017 http://www.wtin.com/article/2017/september/180917/researchers-develop-smart- fabric-to-neutralise-nerve-gas/?freeviewlinkid=64520 7. City College of New York. "Smart fabric neutralizes nerve gas." ScienceDaily. Science Daily, 16 August 2017. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/08/170816134733.htm

5. Other publications concerning the work (books, exhibition catalogues)

X. Invited talks: (64) (164 total presentations)

1. Adsorption for... Beyond adsorption: role of carbon porosity in ORR and CO2RR XVII meeting of Brazilian Materials Research Society, Natal, Brazil, Sept 18, 2018 2. Importance of Carbon Porosity for Energy Related Applications X international Symposium on the Physics and Chemistry of Carbon and Nanoenergetic Materials, Almaty , Kazakhstan, Sept 12, 2018 3. Analysis of factors affecting low concentration formaldehyde removal on porous carbon materials 3rd Ibero-American Congress on Adsorption, Gijon, Spain, Sept. 4, 2018 4. MOF/Graphite oxide composites: exploring new concept of separation media and Catalyst Guangzhou University, China. Nov.23, 2017 5. Beyond Adsorption: A new look at nanoporous carbons Guangzhou University, China. Nov.22, 2017 6. Beyond Adsorption: A new look at nanoporous carbons Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Lorraine Epinal, France June 27 , 2017. 7. Beyond Adsorption: A new look at nanoporous carbons Max Planck Colloids and Interface Potsdam, Germany, May 17, 2017 8. Beyond Adsorption: A new look at nanoporous carbons Department of Chemical Engineering, Barrer Centre,

Page 58 of 73 Imperial College, London, April 4, 2017 9. Beyond Adsorption: A new look at nanoporous carbons Department of Chemical Engineering, Poznan Polytechnic, Poland March 30, 2017. 10. Beyond Adsorption: A new look at nanoporous carbons Instituto Potosino de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica Department of Environmental Science San Luis Potosí, Mexico, December 9, 2016 11. Beyond adsorption: New Perspectives for Nanoporous Carbons TLMC=2, Termas de Chile, Chile Nov 14-Nov 19, 2016 12. Beyond adsorption: New Perspectives for Nanoporous Carbons Department of Chemical l Engineering, Arizona State University, Phenix, AZ, Nov. 7, 2016 13. Beyond adsorption: New Perspectives for Nanoporous Carbons Department of Chemistry, The University of Miami, FL, Nov. 4, 2016 14. Beyond adsorption: New Perspectives for Nanoporous Carbons U.S. Army Natick Soldier Systems Center Natick, MA October 27, 2016 15. Beyond adsorption: New Perspectives for Nanoporous Carbons Department of Civil Engineering Penn State University State College, PA, Oct. 26, 2016 16. Beyond adsorption: New Perspectives for Nanoporous Carbons Department of Chemistry Rutgers University, Newark, NJ, Oct. 19, 2016 17. Beyond adsorption: New Perspectives for Nanoporous Carbons Department of Chemical Engineering, Missouri A&T University, Rola, MO, October 18, 2016 18. MOF/Graphene composites as gas separation media T.J. Bandosz Graphchina 2016, Qingdao, China, September 21-24, 2016 19. Beyond adsorption: New Perspectives for Nanoporous Carbons 2nd Workshop on Adsorption, Bogota Colombia, August 31, 2016 20. Desulfurization of air in water treatment plants City Council of Malaga, Spain, June 13, 2014 21. Towards solving energy problems using carbon-based materials Shinshu University, Nagano, Japan, April 8, 2014 22. MOF/graphene composites: exploring the new concept of separation media University of Queensland, Australia, February 13, 2014. 23. Removal of hydrogen sulfide odor from air in Yew York city water treatment plants: a case study of approach and new perspectives City Council of Malaga, Spain, Dec. 11, 2013 24. Towards solving energy problems using carbon-based materials University of Alicante, Spain, December 4, 2013 25. MOF/graphene composites: exploring the new concept of separation media Celebration of the Chemistry Day

Page 59 of 73 University of Malaga, Spain, Nov. 27. 2013. 26. Towards solving energy problems using carbon-based materials University of Santiago de Compostella, Spain, November 27, 2013 27. Factors affecting desulfurization of liquid fuels on carbonaceous materials Plenary Lecture, 2nd workshop on Adsorption, Universidad de Los Andes, Bogota, Colombia, May 25-31, 2013 28. Towards understanding reactive adsorption of toxic gases on carbonaceous adsorbents. Plenary lecture 2-nd South American Conference of Adsorbents and Adsorption. San Luis, Argentina, February 20-23, 2013. 29. Towards understanding reactive adsorption of toxic gases on carbonaceous adsorbents. Federal University of Ceara, Brazil, Fortaleza, Brazil, January 23, 2013 30. Towards understanding reactive adsorption of toxic gases on carbonaceous adsorbents. Oak Ridge National Laboratory, October 9, 2012. 31. MOF/Graphene composites. Exploring a New Concept of Adsorbents and Catalysts. University of Science and Technology, Krakow, Poland, June 9, 2011. 32. Towards the most efficient diesel oil desulfurization adsorbents: combining the effects of porosity and surface chemistry of activated carbons Invited Keynote speaker to Carbon for Energy storage and Environment Protection IV (France, September 20011) 33. Towards understanding reactive adsorption on activated carbons Max Planck Institute, Berlin , Germany, March 2011. 34. Combined role of Surface Chemistry and Porosity in the performance of Carbons as supercapacitors. Invited speaker to 1st International Symposium on Chemistry of Energy Conversion and Storage (Germany; February 2011). 35. Towards understanding reactive adsorption on activated carbons SUNY, College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, NY Invited to be presented in March 2011. 36. MOF-Graphene composites. New reactive adsorbents for toxic gases. Columbia University; Department of Environmental Engineering January 2011. 37. Towards understanding reactive adsorption on carbonaceous materials Plenary lecture at CARBOCAT 4, Dalian China, November 6-9 (invited to be presented). 38. MOF-Graphene composites: Exploring the new concept of adsorbents and Catalysts Plenary lecture at the Annual Meeting of the Brazilian Institute of Chemical Engineers and Brazilian Adsorption Society, Iguassu Fall, Brazil, September 19-22, 2010 39. Reactive adsorption on carbonaceous materials American University of Sharjah, UAE January 2010 40. Removal of Toxic species on Activated Carbons University of Lisboa, Portugal, December 2009

Page 60 of 73 41. Understanding Reactive Adsorption Blucher Corporation, Dusseldorf, November 2009 42. GO-MOF composites; An insight into New Materials CNRS-CMRS, Orleans France, November 2009 43. Removal of Toxic species on Activated Carbons Nova University of Lisboa, Portugal, December 2009 44. Odor Removal on Carbonaceous Adsorbents Clorox Corporation, Oakland, CA; September 2009 45. MOF-Graphite Oxide Nanocomposites: Surface Characterization and Evaluation as Adsorbents of Ammonia Camille Petit and Teresa J. Bandosz ARO Workshop, Savannah, GA, June 22-25, 2009 46. Understanding Reactive Adsorption of Small Molecule Toxic Gases on Carbonaceous Materials: Experiments And Simulation Chemical Biological Filtration Group Meeting, Arlington, Sept. 9-12, 2008 47. Understanding Reactive Adsorption of Small Molecule Toxic Gases On Carbonaceous Materials: Experiments and Simulation Instituto National Del Carbon, Oviedo Spain, Sept. 17, 2008 48. Understanding Reactive Adsorption of Small Molecule Toxic Gases On Carbonaceous Materials: Experiments and Simulation Teresa J. Bandosz University of Thessalonica Thessalonica, Greece, Sept. 30, 2008 49. Activated Carbon/Inorganic Oxide Composites as Adsorbents of Ammonia Teresa J. Bandosz, Camille Petit AR OIC workshop. Boston, March 17-19 2008 50. Carbonaceous Materials as Desulfurization Media Zulia University, Maracaibo, Venezuela, January 2008. 51. Removal of Ammonia on Carbonaceous Materials Dalhousie University Halifax, Canada June 2007. 52. Desulfurization on Carbonaceous Materials University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia September 2006. 53. Desulfurization on Carbonaceous Materials North Carolina State University October 2006 54. Desulfurization on Carbonaceous Materials Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, China, November 2006 55. Adsorption of dibenzothiophene from liquid phase on activated carbons Conchi O. Ania and T.J. Bandosz Carbon 2005, Gyeongjy, Korea, July3-7, 2005. 56. Carbonaceous materials as desulfurization media NATO advanced Research Workshop, Kiev, Ukraine, September 14-17, 2005. 57. Desulfurization From Gaseous Phase On Carbonaceous Adsorbents- Plenary Talk

Page 61 of 73 9Th International Symposium on Particle Size Analysis, Environmental Protection and Powder Technology, Balatonfured, Hungary, September 5-7, 2004. 58. Desulfurization of Wet Air Streams Fuel Cell Energy, Inc. Danbury CT, April 11, 2002 59. Sewage Sludge Derived materials as Adsorbents of Acidic Gases SUNY at Stony Brook May 15, 2002. 60. Sewage sludge derived adsorbents Universidad Autonoma de Mexico. Mexico (December 2002) Universidad de Guanajuato, Mexico Universidad de Queretaro, Mexico 61. Removal of H2S on Carbon based Adsorbents Cornell University, November 1996. 62. Study of Exhausted Carbons from Sewage Systems Teresa J. Bandosz and Quang Le Abstracts of Pacific Basin Workshop on Adsorption Science and Technology, Kazusa Academia Center, Japan, May 8-10, 1997. 63. Structure of Carbons Obtained by Template Carbonization Method: Application of Adsorption to Characterize Porous Solids. The University of Queensland, Department of Chemical Engineering Brisbane, Australia, July 1995. 64. Structure of Carbons Obtained by Template Carbonization Method. The University of South Carolina, Department of Chemical Engineering Columbia, SC November 1995.

XI. Professional practice and professional service:

1. Applications of expertise to the solution of technical, economic, educational or other societal needs and issues

Contracting agreement with NYC Department of Environmental Protection on monitoring the performance of carbons at 14 Water Pollution Control Plants (ongoing since 1996)

Consultant for:  DuPont  FuelCell Energy  Synagro,  Gateway Consulting  Clorox  Bluecher  CRDF-Global  BARD, the United States - Israel Binational Agricultural Research & Development Fund

Page 62 of 73 Reviewer of proposals for: NSF DTRA US Army Research Office ACS Petroleum Research Funds Australian National Council CNRF ARO European Science Council/ Graphene Flagship

Reviewer of Ph.D. Theses for: The University of Queensland, Australia Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada University of Malaga, Spain India Institute of Technology, India

Reviewer for the following Journals:

Nature Science Nature Materials Scientific Reports Nature Nanotechnlogy Adegewandte Chemie Journal of American Chemical Society Advanced Materials Advanced Functional Materials Chemistry of Materials Applied Catalysis: Environmental Analytical Chemistry Journal of Materials Chemistry Environmental Science and Technology Carbon Journal of Physical Chemistry C Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics Journal of Chromatography A Journal of Hazardous Materials Langmuir ChemPhysChem Catalysis Today Journal of Physical Chemistry B Chemosphere Fuel Journal of Colloid and Interface Science Chemical Engineering Journal, Environmental Journal of Chromatography B

Page 63 of 73 Microporous and Mesoporous Materials Fuel Processing Technology Energy and Fuel Materials Chemistry and Physics Colloids and Surfaces A Industrial and Chemical Engineering Research Applied Surface Science Adsorption Water Research

Patents: 1. Activated Carbons Molecularly Engineered J.A. Schwarz, K. Putyera, J. Jagiello, and T. J. Bandosz U.S. Patent 5,385,876 (1995). 2. Microporous Carbons for Fuel Gas Storage J.A. Schwarz, K. Putyera, J. Jagiello, and T. J. Bandosz U.S. Patent 5,614,460 (1997). 3. Composite Microporous Carbons for Fuel gas Storage J.A. Schwarz, K. Putyera, T. J. Bandosz, J. Jagiello and K.A. Amankwah U.S. Patent 5,837,741 (1998). 4. Preparation of adsorbents from organic fertilizer and mineral oil and their application for removal of acidic gases from sulfur containing wet gas streams, T.J. Bandosz, A. Bagreev, US Patent 6,962,616 (2005) 6. Preparation of MOF/Graphene composites and their application for toxic gases removal T.J. Bandosz and C. Petit, US patent 8,633,331 (2014) 7. Compositions comprising zirconium hydroxide and Graphite oxide and methods for use T.J. Bandosz, M. Seredych, Ch. Karwacki. G. Peterson US patent 8,658,555 (2014) 8. Catalytic adsorbents obtained from municipal sludges, industrial sludges, compost and tobacco waste and process for their production. T.J. Bandosz US Patent 9808761B2 (2016)

2. Dissemination and nature of audiences reached

The patents (2) on production of adsorbents from sewage sludge were licensed to Gateway Consulting, Inc.

The work is published in the international journals listed below, which reach the chemists of various disciplines (analytical, materials, physical, electrochemists, chemical engineers,

Page 64 of 73 civil engineers, environmental scientists, geochemists, physicists, meteorologists, and waste management specialists. The books and book chapters reach the same audiences.

Journal Impact Factor (2018)

Advanced Materials 21.95 Advanced Functional Materials 13.32 Advanced Science 12.44 Applied Catalysis B: Environmental 11.69 ACS Catalysis 11.38 Journal of Materials Chemistry A 9.93 Chemistry of Materials 9.89 Small 9.59 Nanoscale Horizons 9.31 ACS Applied Materials Interfaces 8.09 Nanoscale 7.23 ChemSusChem 7.22 Carbon 7.08 Water Research 7.05 Journal of Power Sources 6.94 Chemical Engineering Journal, Environmental 6.73 Journal of Hazardous Materials 6.43 Analytical Chemistry 6.32 Chemical Communications 6.29 Environmental Science and Technology 6.19 ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering 6.14 Bioresources Technology 5.80 ACS Sensors 5.71 Electrochimica acta 5.11 Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 5.09 Advanced Materials Interfaces 4.83 Waste Management 4.72 ChemCatChem 4.67 Catalysis Today 4.66 Applied Catalysis A 4.52 Journal of Physical Chemistry C 4.48 ChemElectroChem 4.46 Applied Surface Science 4.43 Chemosphere 4.27 Journal of Hydrogen Energy 4.22 Journal of Chromatography A 4.16 Faraday Transactions 4.12 Fuel Processing Technology 3.95 Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 3.90 Langmuir 3.79 Microporous and Mesoporous Materials 3.64

Page 65 of 73 ChemNanoMat 3.17 Journal of Physical Chemistry B 3.14 Industrial and Chemical Engineering Research 3.14 Energy and Fuel 3.02 ChemPhysChem 2.94 Colloids and Surfaces A 2.82 Journal of Chromatography B 2.44 Clays and Clay Minerals 2.23 Materials Chemistry and Physics 2.21 Adsorption 1.89 Molecular Physics 1.77 Journal of Porous Materials 1.52 Water Science and Technology 1.24 Clay Minerals 1.10 Polish Journal of Chemistry 0.523 Advances in Environmental Research 0.47

The scientific conferences attended on the regular bases (listed below) gather chemists of various disciplines, chemical engineers, civil engineers, environmental scientists, geochemists, waste management specialists and US army defense specialist.

 International Carbon Conference (organized every year)  Fundamentals of Adsorption (organized every three years)  Characterization of Porous Solids (organized very three years)  Pacific Basin Conference on Adsorption Science and Technology (organized every three years)  Carbon for Energy Storage and Environment Protection (organized every three years)  International Symposium on Surface Heterogeneity In Adsorption and Catalysis (organized every three years)  International Colloid Conference  Chemical and Biological Defense Science and Technology Conference (organized every year)  Iberoamerican Congress on Adsorption ( every three years)  America Institute of Chemical Engineers meetings  American Chemical Society Meetings  Gordon Conference on Hydrocarbons

Collaboration with scientists and engineers from the following countries:

Australia, Japan, Belgium, Ukraine, Moldova, Spain, France, Portugal, Italy, Mexico, Poland, South , Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Greece, Hungary, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Russian Federation, and the United States.

Mentoring activities towards female students/researches:

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Two of female graduate students received the prestigious Mrozowski Award for the Best Oral Presentation Given by a Student at the international Carbon Conferences (Svetlana Bashkova in 2004 and Camille Petit in 2007).

The lab and experience were/are available to female researchers from various national and international centers.

The following researchers / international students performed research as visitors at Bandosz Laboratory:

Dr. Conchi Ania (INCAR- Spain) Dr. Denisa Hulicova-Jurcakova (The University of Queensland, Australia) Prof. Eleni Deliyanni (The Aristotele University of Thessalonica, Greece) Gabriela Caruyo (Graduate student, Zulia University in Venezuela) Svetlana Kopyl (Graduate student, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences) Irina Dukhno (Graduate student, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences) Rebeca Perez Giron (Graduate student, INCAR, Spain) Dimiti Durand (Graduate Student, INSA, Lyon, France) Theophile Tenza (Graduate Student, INSA, Lyon, France) Mikolaj Koscinski (Graduate Student, AMU, Poznan Poland) Javier Arcibar-Orozco (Graduate Student, San Luis Pelosi, Mexico) Nana Banafo (Graduate Student, University of Southern California) Yohann Corre (Graduate Student, INSA, Lyon, France) Maria Laura Toci (Graduate Student, University of Bresci, Italy) Lucia Messali Graduate Student, University of Bresci, Italy) Rosario Ardesi (Graduate Student, University of Bresci, Italy) Yunxia Zhao (Graduate Student, Naijin University, China) Carla Vidal (Graduate Student, University of Ceara, Brazil) Paula Rodriguez (Universidad de los Andes, Colombia) Javier-Aribar Orozco- Instituto Potosino de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica Prof. Yuping Hu (Guangxi University for Nationalities, Nanning, 530006, China) Prof. Tie-Zhen Ren (Herbin University, China) Tolganay Temirgaliyeva (AL-Farabi University, Kazakhstan) Dr. Suresh Sundaramurthy (Maulana Azad National Institute of Technology Bhopal, India) Dr. Manuel Algarra (University of Malaga, Spain) Dr. Mariusz Barczak (Maria Curie -Sklodowska University, Poland- Fulbright Scholar) Dr. Meruyert Nazhipkyzy (AL-Farabi University, Kazakhstan) Ainura Temorgaliyeva (AL-Farabi University, Kazakhstan) Dr. Deicy Barrera (University of Saint Loius, Argentina - Fulbright Scholar) Giacomo De Falco (University of Naples, Italy)

Page 67 of 73 The following undergraduate female students got research experience at Bandosz Laboratory: Nancy Tello, Nadine Brown, Cindy Duke, Betty Mei-Ki Chan, Wendy Santiago, Sybil Torbierre. Tiri Oo. Leah Pride, Nichole Jones, Deona Deoki (Grinnell College, IN), Barbara Mendoza, Emani Ebrahim, Rui Cheng ( NSF GRF recipient)

Mentoring work involving summer research experience/Intel science competition of the following Stuyvesant High School students Volodimir Starkov Wei Yuan (coauthor of the paper (Fuel, 86, 2736-2746 (2007)). Zoe Wu William Stevens

The following ARO HSAP and USAP students got research experience at Bandosz Laboratory: Josh Berry Anamol Jadvani Mingyung Jiang Renger Fan

Seminars given at the Industrial facilities reached engineers and scientists at the following corporations: DuPont Clorox Bluecher Fuel Cell Energy Inc.

Seminars given at the academic institutions reached the students and faculty from the following universities:

Universidad Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico Universidad de Guanajuato, Mexico Universidad de Queretaro, Mexico SUNY at Stony Brook Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, China North Carolina State University Cornell University Dalhousie University Halifax, Canada University of Queensland, Australia University of Thessalonica, Greece Instituto National Del Carbon, Oviedo Spain Nova University of Lisbon, Portugal University of Lisbon, Portugal CNRS-CMRS, Orleans France

Page 68 of 73 Zulia University, Maracaibo, Venezuela American University of Sharjah, UAE Columbia University, USA Max Planck Institute, Germany University of Santiago de Comspostella, Spain University of Alicante, Spain University of Malaga, Spain Penn State University The University of Arizona The University of Miami Rutgers University Missouri A&T University Instituto Potosino de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica Poznan Polytechnic , Poland Imperial College, London

Seminars given to the general public:

Governor Island, NY, CUNY Energy Institute Summer Series, July 2008 Sewage sludge as precursor for air cleaning adsorbents EMEAS (City Environmental Protection Agency), Malaga , Spain, May 2014

3. Impact of the work

The research perform by my research group focuses on the application of adsorption to environmental problems and has been reported in over 380 peer-reviewed papers, 10 book chapters and more than 160 conference presentations. The topics addressed include development of new analytical methods, new reactive adsorbents based on activated carbons, clays, industrial waste, graphene and metal organic frameworks; desulfurization of air, fuel gases and liquid fuel; and removal of toxic industrial gases (ammonia or hydrogen sulfide) or detoxification of chemical warfare agents. We have also significantly contributed to the fields of nanoporous sulfur and nitrogen doped carbon applications as supercapacitors, oxygen reduction catalyst, visible light water splitting catalyst, CO2 reduction catalyst or gas sensors.

While working at Syracuse University, I significantly contributed to the pioneering idea of the template carbonization methods that led to the development of carbonaceous materials of defined porosity. This method is now extensively used to derive ordered carbon structures. The Research group in which I was a participant at Syracuse University (JA Schwarz Research Group) also developed the new potentiometric titration methodology/ approach, which is now broadly used to characterize the surface chemistry of solids (Determination of proton affinity distributions for chemical systems in aqueous environments using stable numerical solution of the adsorption integral equation, J. Coll. Interf. Sci. 1995, 172,341-346)

Page 69 of 73 In particular, we contributed to the current knowledge of adsorption and separation by focusing on the mechanism of reactive adsorption at ambient conditions, which involves surface reactions. This process, very important for environmental protection and remediation was rather neglected in the field of adsorption studies owing to the relatively large margin of adsorption capacity on some conventional adsorbents. Fine-tuning of the adsorbents properties towards removal of specific compounds at ambient conditions became of paramount importance when the environmental regulations became stricter, and the problems of removal of toxic species from gas and liquid phases evolved. The latter challenge became more pertinent in the wake of life-threatening environmental pollution and/or terrorist attacks. My collaborators (including students) and I contributed to this by combining the basic physicochemical study of adsorbents’ surfaces with the engineering approach of analyzing their performance in simulated real-life conditions. In order to deliver meaningful results, an extensive interdisciplinary approach is used. For this, my education in chemical engineering/materials science and physical chemistry is an important asset. The work involves not only understanding the surface phenomena engaged in the adsorption/separation process but also the development of adsorbents. The surface properties of materials are tailored based on the ongoing findings of my research group. As a result of this approach, we, for the first time, developed unique reactive adsorbents of waste origin that have the potential of catalytic applications. Examples of these adsorbents include sewage/ industrial sludge-based materials (Sewage sludge derived materials as efficient adsorbents for removal of hydrogen sulfide; Environ. Sci. Technol. 2002, 35, 1537-143). The usage of industrial and municipal wastes to develop adsorbents will result not only in waste reduction but also in the conversion of hazardous materials into benign ones. As a result of the work on gas phase desulfurization we presented a comprehensive understanding of the process which provided fundamentals for this kind of adsorbents development. The work is summarized in the feature article (On the adsorption/oxidation of hydrogen sulfide on unmodified activated carbon at temperatures near ambient. J. Coll. Interf.Sci. 2002, 246, 1-20)

Working on adsorption and separation, we have contributed to understanding interactions of water with activated carbon surface and here collaboration with molecular simulation group of Profs. Gubbins was of paramount importance (Water in Porous Carbons, Colloids Surf. A: 2001, 187-188, 539-568). We have also addressed in details reactive adsorption of alcohols, phenols, aldehydes and pharmaceuticals. In the field of gas separation, H2S, SO2, CO2, NH3 and NO/NO2 or, very recently, formaldehyde have been our focus.

Certainly, an important contribution of our research group to materials science is the development for the first-time metal organic framework/graphite oxide composites (MOF/GO) and their applications for adsorption and reactive adsorption. The process of composite formation was a unique idea which employed in situ reaction between the graphite oxide components and the MOF components of the composites. This results in a unique interface (porosity and chemistry) and in the introduction of defect, which enhance many separation processes. Example of the paper reporting this is MOF-GO composites (MOF-graphite oxide composites: combining the uniqueness of graphene layers and framework of MOF, Adv. Mater. 2009, 21, 4753-4757). Since 2009 many research groups all over the world work on these materials following our approach.

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Our research effort in CCNY goes beyond the adsorption phenomena. Our work on surface chemistry and surface modifications have led to important applications in the field of energy storage, carbon-based supercapacitors, ORR catalysts and CO2 sequestration media. Addressing the supercapacitors and the desired properties of carbon electrode materials we, have presented a unique approach linking the specific nitrogen-based surface chemistry (very hot topic nowadays) to the capacitance. This is was presented in Combined effect of nitrogen- and oxygen-containing functional groups of microporous activated carbon on its electrochemical performance in supercapacitors, Adv. Funct. Mater. 2009, 18 ,1-10.

Recently we have addressed the photoactivity of nanoporous carbons doped with sulfur in visible light, and its applications for water splitting, liquid fuel desulfurization or CO2 reduction photocatalysts. We are the first research groups addressing these topics and we have shown that surface functional groups, especially those based on sulfur have a very important in photoactive response of carbon-based materials (Photoactivity of S-doped nanoporous activated carbons: A new perspective for harvesting solar energy on carbon- based semiconductors, Appl. Catal. A. 2012, 445-446 ,159-165).

Inspired by the uniqueness of graphene-based materials and a broad range of their application in catalysis and sensing, our research group very recently was the first one testing the importance of small pores of carbon for electrocatalysis. The results strongly suggest that pores similar in size to CO2 and O2 are catalytic centers for ORR and CO2RR, respectively, owing to the strong adsorption potential which promotes the reactivity. In spite of numerous reports on the performance of nonporous carbons such a CNT or graphene, the application of porous metal-free carbons for these important energy related catalytic reactions has not been explored before. Our results (examples are the papers (Metal Free Nanoporous Carbon as a Catalysts for Electrochemical Reduction of CO2 to CO and CH4, ChemSusChem 2016, 9, 606-601; Electrochemical Reduction of Oxygen on Hydrophobic Ultramicroporous PolyHIPE Carbon. ACS Catal., 2016, 6, 5618–5628) suggest that small pores provide an additional mechanism to that provided by heteroatoms doped to carbon matrix and thus can markedly increase the efficiency of the metal free electrocatalysts.

As in the case of electrocatalyst, the application of graphene as sensors and related to it need of its extensive and costly modifications, directed our attention to test nanoporous carbons for these applications. Once again, the idea was built on distorted layers as walls of carbon pores, on the measurable conductivity of this materials and on expected conductivity change upon adsorption of gases in the pore system. Indeed, porous carbons worked as sensors of ammonia and showed the high sensitivity and selectivity. Examples of the paper where these results are described in Activated carbon-based gas sensors: effects of surface features on the sensing mechanism. J. Mater. Chem. A 2015,3, 3821- 3831.

A very recent example of our work reaching beyond adsorption is our contribution to the development and application of a new and exciting form of carbon materials, Carbon Quantum Dots (CQDs). Besides testing their application as photoluminescence-based

Page 71 of 73 sensors of gases, vapors and explosives, we have also investigated their antibacterial properties and found a direct dependence of their activity on the composition and chemistry. This work, although recently published (S- and N-doped carbon quantum dots: Surface chemistry dependent antibacterial activity. Carbon 2018, 135, 104-11) has been already cited by others. We have also used these CQDs to enhance the antibacterial activity of silver-based MOF composites.

In the field of research related to the development of multifunctional materials for chemical warfare agent decontamination /detoxifications we have developed new efficient reactive adsorbents based on the composites of metal hydroxides, graphite oxides and photoactive graphitic carbon nitride. Their synergistic properties result not only in high adsorption capacity, catalytic detoxification of CWAs but also in visible light photoactivity. Besides numerous papers on this topic we have also recently published a book addressing mainly results obtained in our laboratory (Detoxification of Chemical Warfare Agents: From WWI to Multifunctional Nanocomposite Approaches; 2018, Springer. ISBN-13: 978- 3319707594).

The patents involving conversion of municipal and industrial wastes into adsorbents have been licensed to Gateway Consulting, Inc.

Research work on monitoring carbon and air quality at 16 New York City Water Pollution Control Plants (ongoing for 22 years) resulted in changing the carbon type used to clear air from caustic to virgin, which resulted in significant savings for the City of New York.

Leadership roles and accomplishments

1. H Index (scopus): 58 (excluding self-citations; total citations > 20, 000) 2. Fulbright Senior Scholar (2016/2017) 3. Graffin Lecturer of The American Carbon Society (20167/2017) 4. Appointed to National Academies Committee on Examination of the Disposal of Activated Carbon from the Heating, Ventilation and Air Condition Systems at Chemical Agent Disposal Facilities (May 2008- May 2009). 5. NSF request for the results to be included in NSF Research Highlights 2012

Service to the scientific community 1. Co-editor, Journal of Colloids and Interface Science (2014-present) 2. On the Editorial Board of Adsorption Science and Technology (2005-present) 3. On the Editorial Board of Chemical Engineering Journal (2017-present) 4. On the Editorial Board of Applied Surface Science (2014- present) 5. On the Editorial Board of Carbon (2014- present) 6. On the Editorial Board of Adsorption (2013-present) 7. On the Editorial Board of Journal of Colloid and Interface Science (2008-2010) 8. On the Advisory Board of American Carbon Society (2010- 2016). 9. On the Board of Directors of International Adsorption Society (2013-present) 10. On the Editorial Board of C (2015-present) 11. On the Editorial Board of Eurasian Chemical Technological Journal

Page 72 of 73 12. On Scientific Committee of Pacific Basin Conference on Adsorption Science and Technology II, Australia, May 2000. 13. Session Organizer /Chair at Annual ACS Meetings in Philadelphia (2004) and San Diego (2005). 14. On the Scientific Committee of IV International Symposium on Surface Heterogeneity in Adsorption and Catalysis, August 2006 15. On the Scientific Committee of 2nd , 3rd, 4th and 5th Carbon for Environmental Protection Conference, 2009-2019. 16. On the Advisory Board of 1st United Arab Emirates Conference on Pure and Applied Chemistry (ECPAC11)-American University of Sharjah, February 2011. 17. On the Scientific Committee of Colloids and Materials, Amsterdam 2011. 18. On the Advisory Committee of International Carbon Conference, Krakow, Poland 2012 19. On the Scientific Committee of Fundamental of Adsorption Conference 10, 2013- Baltimore 20. On the Scientific Committee of 5th and 6th International Colloid Conference, Amsterdam 2015, Berlin 2016. 21. On the Scientific Committee of Fundamentals of Adsorpiton-12 Conference, Fredrichshaffen, Germany 2016. 22. On the Scientific Committee of Carbon 2016, State College PA, July 12, 2016 23. On the Scientific committees of the World Colloid and Interface Science Conferences (from 2014-) 24. Chair: Beyond Adsorption workshop, New York City, July 16, 2016. 25. On the Committee of the 8th Conference of Porosity Solids Delray Beach, May 2018 26. On the Scientific Committee of Carbon 0218, Madrid, July 2, 2018. 27. On the Scientific Committee of ISHHAC 10, Lublin, Poland, August 27, 2018 28. On the Scientific Committee of Ibero-American Conference on Adsorption, Gijon, September 4, 2018 29. Chair: Beyond Adsorption 2 workshop- planed in July 2019 in CCNY

Service to CCNY and CUNY 1. On the CUNY Intellectual Property Transfer Committee (since 2005-2010) 2. On the Chemistry Department Executive Committee (since 2007-2014) 3. On the Core Facility Committee (2008) 4. On the CCNY Laboratory Safety Committee 5. Chemistry Department Deputy Chair (2011-2014) 6. CCNY Department of Chemistry Executive Committee (2008-2014) 7. On the CUNY Doctoral Program Executive Committee (2011-2014) 8. Chemistry Department representative to School of Engineering

September 2018

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Board of Trustees of The City University of New York

RESOLUTION TO Appoint Cecilia Maria Gonzalez-McHugh as Distinguished Professor at Queens College of The City University of New York

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, Dr. Cecilia Maria Gonzalez-McHugh is a world-leading authority in submarine paleoseismology, earthquake , marine geology and biogenic sedimentation; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Gonzalez-McHugh has published over 50 peer-reviewed journal articles, over 30 book chapters and over 130 peer-reviewed international abstracts and workshops, of which over 40 included her students; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Gonzalez-McHugh has received over $2 million in external funding over the last 15 years, including 32 oceanographic research expeditioins funded by the National Science Foundation (“NSF”), the Japan Agency for Marine Earth-Science and Technology, the French Institute for Marine Research, the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Germany), Haifa University (Isreal) and the Italian National Research Council, among others; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Gonzalez-McHugh was elected Fellow of the Geological Society of America in 2019, served as Distinguished Lecturer for the International Ocean Discovery Program (2017-18) and was invited to participate in “NSF”-sponsored Rapid Response research following devastating earthquakes and tsunamis in Tohoku, Japan (2010), Haiti (2010), and Turkey (1999); and

WHEREAS, As one of her reviewers notes, Dr. Gonzalez-McHugh “first and foremost, is a dedicated and innovative scholar. She pioneered paleoseismological analysis in marine sediments, and has gone on to become renowned for her contributions. Colleagues from around the world regularly ask her to collaborate and she shares her expertise quite generously. Her pioneering work, finding seismic signals in the sedimentary record, is not only important for science, but also for societal planning. She developed tools to read the history of hazards on continental margins and her work provides much needed information on the frequency and magnitude of earthquakes that can extend the very short historical records”; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Gonzalez-McHugh joined Queens College as an Assistant Professor in 1993 and was promoted to Associate Professor in 1998 and Professor in 2002 and has served on the Doctoral Faculty of the Graduate School in the Ph.D. Program in Earth and Environmental Sciences since 1993 while also serving as Adjunct Associate Researcher (1993-2003) and Adjunct Senior Researcher (2003-present) at the Lamont- Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Gonzalez-McHugh earned a Ph.D. in Marine Geology and Geophysics from Columbia University, Cum Laude, and a B.A. in /Geology from Western Connecticut State University.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

RESOLVED, That the Board of Trustees of The City University of New York appoint Cecilia Maria Gonzalez-McHugh as Distinguished Professor at Queens College effective July 1, 2021, with compensation of $28,594 per annum in addition to her regular academic salary, subject to financial ability.

EXPLANATION: Dr. Gonzalez-McHugh has a long and internationally renowned career in her field and is conducting scholarship and teaching of the highest caliber. Queens College and The City University of New York will be well-served by Professor Gonzalez- McHugh’s appointment as Distinguished Professor. Curriculum Vitae Cecilia Maria Gonzalez-McHugh Queens College, City University of New York

EDUCATION:

1993 - Ph. D: Marine Geology and Geophysics, Columbia University Cum Laude 1987 - B. A.: Earth Science/Geology, Western Connecticut State University, Danbury, Summa Cum Laude

FACULTY APPOINTMENTS:

Queens College 2002-Present Professor Earth and Env. Sciences Queens College 1998-2002 Associate Professor Earth and Env. Sciences Queens College 1993-1998 Assistant Professor Earth and Env. Sciences

Assistant Dean – Division of Math and Natural Sciences – Queens College 2003-2011

Doctoral Faculty of The Graduate School and University Center's Ph.D. Program in Earth and Environmental Sciences - C.U.N.Y. 1993 – Present.

Adjunct Associate Researcher - Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University 1993- 2003

Adjunct Senior Researcher - Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University 2003- Present

Visiting Scientist - Japan Agency for Marine Science and Technology 2013-2014

Fellow of the Geological Society of America 2018

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS:

1985 - Present: Geological Society of America 1989 - Present: American Geophysical Union 1993 -2005: Society Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists 1985 -2003: American Association of Petroleum Geologists

1

RESEARCH INTERESTS

• Land-Sea Interactions in the Indian Ocean: Tectonics, Paleoearthquakes, Paleoclimate, Fluvial Processes

• Developing Tools for Submarine Earthquake Geology in Subduction and Transform Plate Boundaries

• Global Sea Level Changes and Seismic Stratigraphy along Continental Margins

• Connections and Reconnections of Marginal Basins in Response to Average Global Sea Level Changes

• Impact of Sea Level Changes, Storms and Pollution in Estuaries and Coasts

HONORS AND AWARDS

2019 – Elected Fellow of the Geological Society of America

2017-2018: Distinguished Lecturer for the International Ocean Discovery Program

2002: Western Connecticut State University Centennial Award for Academic Excellence

1998: Undergraduate Faculty Mentoring Research Award - Queens College, C.U.N.Y . 1997: Presidential Research Award - Queens College, C.U.N.Y.

1994: Sigma Xi

1993: "Cum Laude" Columbia University

1990 - 1993 Graduate Research Assistant, Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory and Department of Geological Sciences of Columbia University

1990: Marine Geology and Geophysics Travel Award, Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory and Department of Geological Sciences of Columbia University

1987-1990: Graduate Research Assistant, Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory and Department of Geological Sciences of Columbia University

1987: Outstanding Accomplishments in Geological Sciences, The Danbury Mineralogical Society, Danbury, Connecticut

1987: "Summa Cum Laude" Western Conn. State University

2

RESEARCH EXPEDITIONS

Main Source of Funding: * National Science Foundation

Others:

# Japan Agency for Marine Earth-Science and Technology (JAMSTEC). Invited Dr. T. Kanamatsu + French Institute for Marine Research (IFREMER). Invited Dr. P. Henry ° Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Germany). Invited Dr. M. Strasser ^ New York and Connecticut State Agencies ++ PSC-CUNY Research Foundation ## Haifa University, Israel. Invited Dr. Y. Mart ++ Italian National Research Council. Invited Dr. A. Polonia

1. Summer 2020 R/V Kaimei and D/V Chikyu IODP Expedition 386: J-Track Submarine Paleoseismology: Japan Trench. Proposal Co-Pi 2. ^August 2018. R/V Pritchard. Long Island Sound Mapping. Co-Chief 3. ^June 2018. R/V Seawolf. Long Island Sound Mapping. Co-Chief 4. ^ August 2017. R/V Pritchard. Long Island Sound Mapping. Co-Chief 5. ° October 2016. R/V Sonne. Extreme events archive in the geological record of Japan’s subduction margins. Sedimentologist 6. *August-September 2015. R/V Joides Resolution IODP. Expedition 356. Indonesian Throughflow. Sedimentologist 7. + November 2014, R/V Pourquoi Pas. MARsiteCruise to study the seismicity, tectonics, and earthquake history of the North Anatolia Fault in Marmara Sea, Turkey. 8. # August –September 2013, R/V Natsushima. The Survey and Observation for Earthquakes and Tsunamis off the Pacific Coast of Tohoku”. Sedimentologist 9. ^ June 2013, R/V Pritchard. Long Island Sound Mapping. In charge of sediment grab program- Co-Chief 10. ^ June 2013, R/V Seawolf. Long Island Sound Mapping - In charge of sediment grab program- Co-Chief 11. *May 2013, R/V SeaVee. Survey of Lake Enriquillo, Dominican Republic to assess activity along the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden Transform Boundary. Co-Chief 12. *March 2013, R/V Pritchard. NSF RAPID response to evaluate the impact of super storm SANDY. Co-Chief 13. # January- February 2013, R/V Natsushima. “The Survey and Observation for Earthquakes and Tsunamis off the Pacific Coast of Tohoku”. Sedimentologist. 14. *February 23-March 15, 2010, R/V Endeavor. NSF RAPID: Collaborative Research: Off- shore coseismic effects of the Port au Prince earthquake, Haiti. Chief Scientist 15. *November 4 - 2009 - January 4, 2010, R/V Joides Resolution. Leg 317 - Canterbury Basin, New Zealand: Sea-level, climate and tectonics. Sedimentologist

3

16. *July 2006, R/V Hugh Sharp. Partnership to Enhance Diversity in Marine Geosciences: Holocene Climate and Anthropogenic Changes from Long Island Sound, NY. Co-Chief 17. ## August 2005, R/V Mediterranean Explorer. Latest Pleistocene and Holocene paleoceanography of the Marmara Sea and Black Sea. Sedimentologist. 18. ^ September 2002 R/V Robert Hayes. Developing High-Resolution Climate Records for the Hudson River Region Using an Integrated Approach. Co-Chief. 19. *May 2002 R/V Endeavor. New Tools Applied to Classic Problem: Towards an Understanding of What Shapes the Stratigraphic Record at Passive Margins. Co-Chief 20. ++ May 2001, R/V Urania. Tectonics of the North Anatolia fault beneath the Marmara Sea. Coring, geophysics, and R.O.V. dives. Co-Chief. 21. *+ June 1999. R/V Marion Dufresne. STRATAFORM/ODP Sampling of Quaternary sediment with CALYPSO coring equipment. Co-Chief. 22. ^ May 1999. R/V Walford. Hudson River Estuary Benthic Mapping: Sediment Sampling. Co-Chief. 23. ^ November 1998. R/V Onrust. Hudson River Benthic Mapping: Sediment Sampling. Co- Chief. 24. ++ August 1998. R/V Walford. Sediment sampling of Sandy Hook Bay, New Jersey to assess toxic waste dumping on the submarine environment. Co-Chief. 25. ++ July -September, 1997. R/V Walford. Sediment sampling of the New York Bight and Hudson River Estuary to assess toxic waste dumping on the submarine environment. Co- Chief. 26. *June - July 1997, R/V Joides Resolution. Ocean Drilling Program (ODP), Leg 174A: Studies of the New Jersey Shelf. Sedimentologist. 27. *May - July 1993, R/V Joides Resolution. Ocean Drilling Program (ODP), Leg 150: New Jersey sea-level/Mid-Atlantic Transect. Sedimentologist. 28. *May, 1993, R/V Point Lobos: Groundtruthing of side-looking sonar data of Monterey Canyon and San Gregorio fault, off-shore Monterey, CA, with Remote Operated Vehicle. Co-Chief 29. *September 1990, R/V Point Sur: A multi-frequency side-looking sonar study of the Monterey Canyon and Fan, off-shore Monterey, California, U.S.A. 30. *December, 1989, R/V Atlantis II: A study of the age and origin of erosional features on the U.S. continental slope off-shore New Jersey determined from Alvin dives, piston cores, and SeaBeam bathymetry. 31. *August, 1989, R/V Atlantis II: Ground-truth side-looking sonar data (SeaMARC I and GLORIA) and stratigraphic studies of the of the U.S. continental slope off-shore New Jersey determined from Alvin dives, piston cores, and physical properties measurements. SeaBeam bathymetric survey George's Banks, U.S. slope. 32. *October 1988, R/V Atlantis II: Alvin dives and photographic survey to study stratigraphy and sedimentary processes in the Monterey Canyon and Fan off-shore Monterey, California. .

4

PUBLICATIONS

a. Peer Reviewed Journals *student

2019

1. McHugh, C. M., Seeber, L., Rasbury, T., Strasser, M., Kanamatsu, T., Ikehara, K., Usami, K., McCain, L., Kioka, A. (in review). The Isotopic and Sedimentary Signature of Megathrust Ruptures in the Japan Trench Margin. Earth and Planetary Science Letters EPSL-D-19-01409

2. *Wright, V., Hornbach, M., Brown, L., McHugh, C., Mitchell, S., 2019. Neotectonics of Southeast Jamaica derived from marine seismic surveys and gravity cores. Tectonics 38:1-17 doi.org/10.1029/2019TC005806

3. *Ishiwa, T., Yokoyama, Y., Reuning, L., McHugh, C., De Vleeschouwer, D., 2019. Australia summer monsoon variability in the past 14,000 years revealed by IODP Expedition 356 sediments. Progress in Earth and Planetary Science 6:19 doi.org/10.1186/s40645-019-0262- 5

4. *Kioka, A., *Schwestermann, T., Moernaut, J., Ikehara, K., Kanamatsu, T., McHugh, C. M., dos Santos Ferreira, C., Wiemer, G., Haghipour, N., Kopf, A. J., Eglington, T. I. and Strasser, M. (2019). Megathrust earthquake drives drastic organic carbon supply into the hadal trench. Scientific Reports, doi:10.1038/s41598-019-38834-x (2019).

2018

5. *Mondal, D., McHugh, C.M., Mortlock, R., Steckler, M., Mustaque, S. 2018. Microatolls document the 1762 and prior earthquakes along the southeast coast of Bangladesh. Tectonophysics. doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2018.07.020

6. *Tagliaro, G., Fulthorpe, C. S., Gallagher, S. J., McHugh, C. M., Kominz, M., Lavier, L. L., 2018. Neogene siliciclastic deposition and climate variability on a carbonate margin: Australia Northwest Shelf. Marine Geology 403:285-300. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2018.06.007

2017

7. *Usami, K., Ikehara, K. Kanamatsu, T., McHugh, C., 2018. Supercycle in great earthquake recurrence along the Japan Trench over the last 4000 years. Geoscience Letters v. 5(11), pg. 1-12

8. McHugh, C.M., Fulthorpe, C. S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum. P., Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., 2017. The sedimentary imprint of Pleistocene glacio-eustasy: Implications for global correlations of seismic sequences. Geosphere, v. 14, no 1, p 1-21. DOI:10.1130/GES01569.1

5

5. Kanamatsu, T., Usami, K., McHugh, C.M., Ikehara, K., 2017. High-resolution chronology of sediment below CCD based on Holocene paleomagnetic secular variations in the Tohoku-oki earthquake rupture zone. 2017. Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems v. 18, p 1-13. Doi:10.1002/2017GC006878.

6. Christensen, B.A., Renema, W., Henderiks, J., De Vleeschouwer, D., Groeneveld, J., Castaneda, I., Reuning, L., Bogus, K., Auer, G., Ishiwa, T., McHugh, C.M., Gallagher, S. J., Fulthorpe, C.S., and IODP Expedition 356 Scientists, 2017. Indonesian Throughflow drove Australian climate from humid Pliocene to arid Pleistocene. Geophysical Research Letters 44, p, 6914- 6925. Doi:10.1002/2017GL072977.

7. Groeneveld, J., Henderiks, J., Renema, W., McHugh, C.M., DeVleeschouwer, D., Christensen, B.A., Fulthorpe, C.S., Reuning, L., Gallagher, S.J., Bogus, K., Auer, G., Ishiwa, T., and Expedition 356 Scientists. 2017. Australian shelf sediments reveal shifts in Miocene Southern Hemisphere Westerlies. Science Advances: vol. 3, no. 5, e1602567, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1602567

2016

8. McHugh, C.M., Kanamatsu, T., Seeber, L., Bopp, R., Cormier, M.-H., Usami, K., 2016. Remobilization of surficial slope sediment triggered by the A.D. 2011 Mw9 Tohoku-Oki earthquake and tsunami along the Japan Trench. Geology 44(5), 391-394. doi:10.1130/G37650.

9. McHugh, C. M., Strasser, M., Cattaneo, A., Ikehara, K., 2016. Submarine Paleoseismology: Using Giant Piston Coring within IODP to fill the gap in the Long-term Records of Great Earthquakes. Ocean Discovery, The US Scientific Ocean Drilling Community Newsletter, Spring 2016, pgs. 4-5.

2015

10. *Wright, V. D., Hornbach, M. J., McHugh, C., Mann, P. 2015. Factors contributing to the 2005-Present, rapid rise in lake levels, Dominican Republic and Haiti (Hispaniola). Natural Resources vol 6, No. 8. DOI:10.4236/nr.2015.68045

11. Strasser, M., Cattaneo, A., Ikehara, K., McHugh, C.M., 2015. Submarine Paleoseismology : Using giant-piston coring within IODP to fill the gap in long-term records of great earthquakes – 16-18 July 2015, Zurich (Switzerland). ECORD Newsletter, 25: 24.

2014

12. McHugh, C.M., L. Seeber, M.-H. Cormier, M. Hornbach, 2014. Submarine Paleoseismology along Populated Transform Boundaries: The Enriquillo-Plantain-Garden Fault, Canal du Sud,

6

Haiti, and the North Anatolian Fault, Marmara Sea, Turkey. Oceanography Special Issue on Submarine Natural Hazards. Oceanography 27(2), p. 118-131.

13. McHugh, C.M.G., Braudy, N., Çağatay, M. N., Sorlien, C., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Henry, P., 2014. Seafloor ruptures along the North Anatolia Fault in the Marmara Sea, Turkey: Link with the adjacent basin turbidite record. Marine Geology v. 353, p. 65-83.

2012

14. McHugh, C.M., Seeber, L., Çağatay, N., Henry, P., Sorlien, C., Steckler, M., Uçarkuş, G., 2012. Tectonic Hazards along Continental Transform Boundaries “An Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Marmara-Trans Workshop on Continental Transform Boundaries: Tectonic Evolution and Geohazards . Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Scientific Drilling Journal No. 13 Pages 60-64.

15. Shillington, D.J., Seeber, L., Sorlien, C.C., Steckler, M.S., Kurt, H., Dondurur, D., Cifici, G., Cormier, M.-H., McHugh, C.M.G., Gurcay, S., Poyraz, D., Okay, S., Atgin, O., Diebold, J. B., 2012. Evidence for widespread creep on the flanks of the Sea of Marmara Transform basin from marine geophysical data. Geology 40, p 439-442.

2011

16. McHugh, C.M., Seeber, L., 2011. Studying tectonic hazards along continental transform boundaries. EOS Transactions American Geophysical Union, V. 92, No. 48, p. 444.

17. McHugh, C., Seeber, L., Braudy, N., Cormier, M.-H., Davis, M., Dieudonné, N., Deming, J., Diebold, J., Douilly, R., Gulick, S., Hornbach, M., Johnson, H., Mishkin, K., Sorlien, C., Steckler, M., Symithe, S., Templeton, J., 2011. Offshore sedimentary effects of the 12 January Haiti earthquake. Geology 39, 8, 723-726. doi:10.1130/G31815.1

18. Hornbach, M.J., N. Braudy, R.W. Briggs, M.H. Cormier, M.B. Davis, J.B. Diebold, N. Dieudonné, R. Douilly, C. Frohlich, S.P.S. Gulick, H.E. Johnson, P. Mann, C. M. G. McHugh, K. Mishkin, C.S. Prentice, L. Seeber, C.C. Sorlien, M.S. Steckler. S.J. Symithe, F.W. Taylor, J. Templeton, 2010. High tsunami frequency as a result of combined strike-slip faulting and coastal landslides, Nature Geoscience, 3, 783-788.

2010

19. McHugh, C.M., Hartin, C., Mountain, G.S., Gould, H., 2010. The role of glacio-eustasy in sequence formation: Mid-Atlantic Continental Margin, USA. Marine Geology 277, p. 33-47. doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2010.08.009

20. *Sorichetta A., Seeber L., Taramelli A., McHugh C. M. G., Cormier M.-H. 2010. Geomorphic evidence for tilting at a continental transform: The Karamursel Basin along the North Anatolian Fault (NAF), Turkey. Geomorphology 119, 221-231. Doi:100.1016/j.geomorph.2010.03.035

7

21. McHugh, C., Gulick, S., Cormier, M.-H., Braudy, N. , Davis, M., De Bow, S., Dieudonne, N., Deming, J., Diebold, J., Douilly, R., Hornbach, M., Johnson, H., Mishkin, K., Seeber, L., Sorlien, C., Steckler, M., Symithe, S., Templeton, J., Wilson, R., 2010. Project REPONS: Offshore fault mapping and turbidite record reconnaissance in response to the January 12 2010 earthquake, Haiti. 2010. Seismological Research Letters Volume 81, No 3.

2008

22. McHugh, C. M., Gurung, D., Giosan, L., Ryan, W. B. F., Mart, Y., Sancar, U., Burckle, L., Cagatay, M.N. 2008. The last reconnection of the Marmara Sea, Turkey to the World Ocean: A paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic perspective. Marine Geology v. 255, p. 64-82. doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2008.07.005

2006

23. McHugh, C. M. G., Seeber, L., Cormier, M.-H., Dutton, J., Cagatay, N., Polonia, A., Ryan, W. B. F., and Gorur, N. 2006. Submarine earthquake geology along the North Anatolia Fault in the Marmara Sea, Turkey: A model for transform basin sedimentation. Earth and Planetary Sciences 248, 661-684. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2006.05.038

24. Cormier, M.-H., L. Seeber, C. M. G. McHugh, A. Polonia, M.N. Çagatay, O. Emre, L. Gasperini, N. Gorur, G. Bortolouzzi, E. Bonatti, W.B.F. Ryan, and K. Newman, 2006. The North Anatolian fault in the Gulf of Izmit (Turkey): Rapid vertical motion in response to minor bends of a non-vertical continental transform, Journal of Geophysical Research v. 111, BO4102. doi:1029/2005JB003633.

25. Seeber, L., M.-H. Cormier, C. McHugh, Ö. Emre, A. Polonia, , C. Sorlien, 2006. Rapid subsidence and sedimentation from oblique slip near a bend on the North Anatolian transform fault in the Marmara Sea, Turkey. Geology 34(11), p. 933-936.

2004

26. McHugh, C. M. G., Pekar, S., Christie-Blick, N., Ryan, W.B.F., Carbotte, S., Bell, R., 2004, Spatial variations in a condensed interval between estuarine and open marine settings: Holocene Hudson River Estuary and adjacent continental shelf. Geology 32 (2), 169-172.

27. L. Seeber, O. Emre, M. Cormier, C. Sorlien, C. McHugh, A. Polonia, N. Ozer, and N. Cagatay, 2004. Uplift and subsidence from oblique slip: The Ganos-Marmara Bend of the North Anatolian Transform. Tectonophysics v. 391 (1-4), p. 239-258.

28. Polonia, A., Gasperini, L., Amorosi, A., Bonatti, E., Cagatay, N., Capotondi, L., Cormier, M.- H., Gorur, N., McHugh, C., Seeber, L., 2004. Holocene slip rate of the North Anatolian Fault beneath the Sea of Marmara. Earth and Planetary Science Letters v. 227:411-426.

8

29. Pekar, S. F., McHugh, C. M. G., Christie-Blick, N., Lynch-Stieglitz, J., Carbotte, S., and Bell, R. E., 2004. Estuarine processes and their stratigraphic record: paleosalinity and sedimentation changes in the Hudson Estuary: Marine Geology, v. 209, p. 113-129.

2003

30. M. N. Cagatay, N. Gorur, A. Polonia, E. Demirbag, M. Sakinc, M., -H. Cormier, L. Capotondi, C. McHugh, O. Emre, K. Eris, 2003. Sea-level changes and depositional environments in the Izmit Gulf, eastern Marmara Sea, during the late glacial-Holocene period. Marine Geology 202, p. 159-173.

2002

31. McHugh, C. M. G., and Olson, H.C., 2002. Pleistocene chronology of continental margin sedimentation: New insights into traditional models, New Jersey. Marine Geology 185, p. 389- 411.

32. McHugh, C. M. G., Damuth, J. E, and Mountain, G. S. 2002. Cenozoic mass-transport facies and their correlation with relative sea-level change, New Jersey continental margin. Marine Geology 184, p. 295-334.

33. Ladd, J., Bell, R.E., Bokuniewicz, H., Carbotte, S., Cerrato, R.M., Chillrud, S., Ferrini, B.L., Flood, R.D., Maher, N.P., McHugh, C. M. G., Nitsche, F. O., Ryan, W. B. F., Strayer, D. L., Thissen, J. A., Vesteeg, R., 2002. Mapping the Hudson Estuary’s Submerged Lands. Clearwaters v. 32, No. 1, p. 5-9.

2001

34. Svarda, C., Karwinkel, H., McCarthy, F. M. G., McHugh, C. M. G., Olson, H. C., Mountain, G. 2001. Ichnofabrics of a Pleistocene succession, New Jersey margin: Relations to climate and sea-level dynamics. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology v. 171, p. 41- 61 doi:10.1016/S0031-0182(01)00266-8

2000

35. McHugh, C.M.G. and Ryan, W.B.F., 2000. Sedimentary features associated with channel overbank flow: examples from the Monterey Fan. Marine Geology 163, 199-215.

1998

36. McHugh, C. M. G., Snyder, S. W., and Miller, K. G., 1998. Upper Eocene ejecta of the New Jersey continental margin reveal dynamics of Chesapeake Bay. Earth and Planetary Science Letters v.160, 3-4, p 353-367.

9

37. Orange, D. L., Greene, H. G., Reed, D., Martin, J., McHugh, C. M. G., Ryan, W. B. F., and Barry, J., 1998. Active and dormant mud volcanism in Monterey Bay, California I: ROV Observations. Geological Society of America Bulletin v.111, No. 7, p. 992-1009.

38. McHugh, C. M. G., Ryan, W. B. F., Eittreim, S., and Reed, D, 1998, Influence of the San Gregorio fault zone on the morphology of Monterey Canyon system off-shore Monterey Bay, California. Marine Geology v. 146, p. 63-91.

39. Glass, B. P., Koeberl, C., Blum, J. D., and McHugh, C. M. G., 1998. Upper Eocene tektite and impact ejecta layer on the continental slope off New Jersey. Meteoritics & Planetary Science, v. 33, 229-241.

1997

40. McHugh, C. M. G., 1997, Effects of sea-level changes on the diagenesis of Eocene sediment: New Jersey slope and coastal plain, In: Miller, K. G., Snyder, S. W., (Eds.): Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, 150X: College Station, TX (ODP) 25-48.

1996

41. McHugh, C. M. G., Damuth, J. E., Gartner, S., Katz, M. E., and Mountain, G. S., 1996, Oligocene to Recent mass-transport deposits of the New Jersey continental margin and their correlation to sequence boundaries, In: Mountain, G. S., Miller, K. G, Blum, P., Poag, W., Twichell, D. (Edts.): Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, 150: College Station, TX (ODP), 189-228.

42. McHugh, C. M. G., Snyder, S. W., Deconinck, J. F., Saito, Y., Aubry, M. P., and Katz, M. E., 1996, Upper Eocene tektites of the New Jersey continental margin: ODP, Site 904, In: Mountain, G. S., Miller, K. G, Blum, P., Poag, W., Twichell, D. (Edts.): Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, 150: College Station, TX (ODP), 241-269.

43. Mountain, G., Damuth, J., McHugh, C., Lorenzo, J., and Fulthrope, 1996, Origin, re-Burial and significance of a mid-Miocene Canyon, New Jersey Continental Slope, In: Mountain, G. S., Miller, K. G, Blum, P., Poag, W., Twichell, D. (Edts.): Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, 150: College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 283-293.

44. Barry, J.P., Greene, H. G., Orange, D., Baxter, C. H., Robinson, B. H., Kochevar, R. E., Nybakken, J., Reed, D., McHugh, C. 1996. Biologic and geologic characteristics of cold seeps in Monterey Bay, California. Deep Sea Research Part I; Oceanographic Research Papers v. 43 (11-12), p. 1739-1762.

1994

45. O'Connell, S., McHugh, C. M., and Ryan, W. B. F., 1994, Unique fan morphology in an entrenched thalweg channel on the Rhone Fan, In Pickering, K. T., Hiscott, R. N., Kenyon, N.

10

H., Ricci Lucchi, F., and Smith, R. D. A., Eds, Atlas of Deep Water Environments, Chapman & Hall. p 80-83.

1993

46. McHugh, C. M., Ryan, W. B. F., and Schreiber. B. C., 1993, The role of diagenesis in exfoliation of submarine canyons, American Association of Petroleum Geology Bulletin v. 77, no. 2, p.145-172.

1992

47. McHugh, C. M., Ryan, W. B. F., and Hecker, B., 1992, Contemporary sedimentary processes in the Monterey Canyon fan system, Marine Geology, v. 107, p. 35-50.

1991

48. Ryan, W. B. F., Haxby, W., Pratson, L., McHugh, C. M., 1991, Intercomparison of co- registered Seabeam bathymetry, Hydrosweep bathymetry, SeaMarc I imagery and submersible observations on the continental slope of the eastern U.S., IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering, v. 3, p. 1159-1164.

1990

49. Rau, G. H., McHugh, C. M., Harrold, C., Baxter, C., Hecker, B., Embley, R. W., 1990. δ13C, δ15N, δ18O of Calyptogena phaseoliformis (bivalve mollusk) from the Ascension Fan-Valley near Monterey, California. Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers v. 37 (11), p. 1669-1676.

50. Embley, R. W., Eittreim, S. L., McHugh, C. H., Normark, W. R., Rau, G. H., Hecker, B., DeBevoise, A. E., Greene, H. G., Ryan, W. B. F., Harrold, C., Baxter, C. 1990. Geological setting of chemosynthetic communities in the Monterey Fan Valley system. Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers v. 37 (11), p. 1651-1667.

b. Selected Book Chapters:

1. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., G. Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang. 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/ iodp.proc.356.2017

11

2. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., G. Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang. 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Expedition 356 Summary. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/iodp.proc.356.101.2017

3. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., G. Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang, 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Expedition 356 Methods. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/iodp.proc.356.102.2017

4. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang, 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Site U1458. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/ iodp.proc.356.103.2017

5. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang, 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Site U1459. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/ iodp.proc.356.104.2017

6. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang, 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Site U1460. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/ iodp.proc.356.105.2017

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7. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang, 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Site U1461. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/ iodp.proc.356.106.2017

8. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang, 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Site U1462. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/ iodp.proc.356.107.2017

9. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang, 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Site U1463. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/ iodp.proc.356.108.2017

10. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang, 2017. Indonesian Throughflow. Site U1464. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 356: College Station, Texas (International Ocean Discovery Program) http://dx.doi.org/10.14379/iodp.proc.356.109.2017

11. Gallagher, S.J., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., Auer, S. Baranwal, I.S. Castañeda, B.A. Christensen, D. De Vleeschouwer, D.R. Franco, J. Groeneveld, M. Gurnis, C. Haller, Y. He, J. Henderiks, T. Himmler, T. Ishiwa, H. Iwatani, R.S. Jatiningrum, M.A. Kominz, C.A. Korpanty, E.Y. Lee, E. Levin, B.L. Mamo, H.V. McGregor, C.M. McHugh, B.F. Petrick, D.C. Potts, A. Rastegar Lari, W. Renema, L. Reuning, H. Takayanagi, and W. Zhang, 2017. International Ocean Discovery Program Preliminary Report. Indonesian Throughflow. 2016.

12. Ryan, W. B. F., Vachtman, D., McHugh, C., Cagatay, N., Mart, Y., 2014. A channeled shelf fan initiated by flooding of The Black Sea. In “The Mediterranean Sea: Its History and Present Challenges”. Chapter 3. Editors Stefano Goffredo and Zvy Dubnisky.

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13. Fulthorpe, C. S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., Blair, S. A., Browne, G. H., Carter, R. M., Ciobanu, M.-C., Claypool, G. E., Crundwell, M. P., Dinares-Turell, J., Ding, X., George, S. C., Guerin, G., Hepp, D. A., Jaeger, J., Shungo, K., Kemp, D. B., Kim, Y.-G., Kominz, M. A., Lever, H., Lipp, J., Marsaglia, K. M. McHugh, C. M., Murakoshi, N., Ohi, T., Pea, L., Richaud, M., Slagle, A., Suto, I., Tanabe, S., Tinto, K. J., Uramoto, G., Yoshimura, T., 2011. Expedition 317 Summary. In Fulthorpe, C.S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., and the Expedition 317 Scientists, Proceedings IODP, 317: Tokyo (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc.). doi:10.2204/iodp.proc.317.101.2011 http://publications.iodp.org/proceedings/317/101/101_.htm

14. Fulthorpe, C. S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., Blair, S. A., Browne, G. H., Carter, R. M., Ciobanu, M.-C., Claypool, G. E., Crundwell, M. P., Dinares-Turell, J., Ding, X., George, S. C., Guerin, G., Hepp, D. A., Jaeger, J., Shungo, K., Kemp, D. B., Kim, Y.-G., Kominz, M. A., Lever, H., Lipp, J., Marsaglia, K. M. McHugh, C. M., Murakoshi, N., Ohi, T., Pea, L., Richaud, M., Slagle, A., Suto, I., Tanabe, S., Tinto, K. J., Uramoto, G., Yoshimura, T., 2011. IODP Expedition 317: Exploring the Record of Sea Level Change Off New Zealand. Scientific Drilling v. 12, p. 4-14. Fulthorpe, C. S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., Blair, S. A., Browne, G. H., Carter, R. M., Ciobanu, M.-C., Claypool, G. E., Crundwell, M. P., Dinares-Turell, J., Ding, X., George, S. C., Guerin, G., Hepp, D. A., Jaeger, J., Shungo, K., Kemp, D. B., Kim, Y.-G., Kominz, M. A., Lever, H., Lipp, J., Marsaglia, K. M. McHugh, C. M., Murakoshi, N., Ohi, T., Pea, L., Richaud, M., Slagle, A., Suto, I., Tanabe, S., Tinto, K. J., Uramoto, G., Yoshimura, T., 2011. Methods. In Fulthorpe, C.S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., and the Expedition 317 Scientists, Proceedings IODP, 317: Tokyo (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc.). doi:10.2204/iodp.proc.317.102.2011 http://publications.iodp.org/proceedings/317/102/102_.htm

15. Fulthorpe, C. S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., Blair, S. A., Browne, G. H., Carter, R. M., Ciobanu, M.-C., Claypool, G. E., Crundwell, M. P., Dinares-Turell, J., Ding, X., George, S. C., Guerin, G., Hepp, D. A., Jaeger, J., Shungo, K., Kemp, D. B., Kim, Y.-G., Kominz, M. A., Lever, H., Lipp, J., Marsaglia, K. M. McHugh, C. M., Murakoshi, N., Ohi, T., Pea, L., Richaud, M., Slagle, A., Suto, I., Tanabe, S., Tinto, K. J., Uramoto, G., Yoshimura, T., 2011. Site U1351. In Fulthorpe, C.S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., and the Expedition 317 Scientists, Proceedings IODP, 317: Tokyo (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc.). doi:10.2204/iodp.proc.317.103.2011 http://publications.iodp.org/proceedings/317/103/103_.htm

16. Fulthorpe, C. S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., Blair, S. A., Browne, G. H., Carter, R. M., Ciobanu, M.-C., Claypool, G. E., Crundwell, M. P., Dinares-Turell, J., Ding, X., George, S. C., Guerin, G., Hepp, D. A., Jaeger, J., Shungo, K., Kemp, D. B., Kim, Y.-G., Kominz, M. A., Lever, H., Lipp, J., Marsaglia, K. M. McHugh, C. M., Murakoshi, N., Ohi, T., Pea, L., Richaud, M., Slagle, A., Suto, I., Tanabe, S., Tinto, K. J., Uramoto, G., Yoshimura, T., 2011. Site U1352. In Fulthorpe, C.S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., and the Expedition 317 Scientists, Proceedings IODP, 317: Tokyo (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc.). doi:10.2204/iodp.proc.317.104.2011 http://publications.iodp.org/proceedings/317/104/104_.htm

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17. Fulthorpe, C. S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., Blair, S. A., Browne, G. H., Carter, R. M., Ciobanu, M.-C., Claypool, G. E., Crundwell, M. P., Dinares-Turell, J., Ding, X., George, S. C., Guerin, G., Hepp, D. A., Jaeger, J., Shungo, K., Kemp, D. B., Kim, Y.-G., Kominz, M. A., Lever, H., Lipp, J., Marsaglia, K. M. McHugh, C. M., Murakoshi, N., Ohi, T., Pea, L., Richaud, M., Slagle, A., Suto, I., Tanabe, S., Tinto, K. J., Uramoto, G., Yoshimura, T., 2011. Site U1353. In Fulthorpe, C.S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., and the Expedition 317 Scientists, Proceedings IODP, 317: Tokyo (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc.). doi:10.2204/iodp.proc.317.105.2011 http://publications.iodp.org/proceedings/317/105/105_.htm

18. Fulthorpe, C. S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., Blair, S. A., Browne, G. H., Carter, R. M., Ciobanu, M.-C., Claypool, G. E., Crundwell, M. P., Dinares-Turell, J., Ding, X., George, S. C., Guerin, G., Hepp, D. A., Jaeger, J., Shungo, K., Kemp, D. B., Kim, Y.-G., Kominz, M. A., Lever, H., Lipp, J., Marsaglia, K. M. McHugh, C. M., Murakoshi, N., Ohi, T., Pea, L., Richaud, M., Slagle, A., Suto, I., Tanabe, S., Tinto, K. J., Uramoto, G., Yoshimura, T., 2011. Site U1354. In Fulthorpe, C.S., Hoyanagi, K., Blum, P., and the Expedition 317 Scientists, Proceedings IODP, 317: Tokyo (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc.). doi:10.2204/iodp.proc.317.106.2011 http://publications.iodp.org/proceedings/317/106/106_.htm

19. Mountain, G.S., Burger, R.L., Delius, H., Fulthorpe, C.S., Austin, J.A., Goldberg, D.S., Steckler, M.S., McHugh, C.M., Miller, K.G., Monteverde, D.H., Orange, D.L. and Pratson, L.F., 2007. The long-term stratigraphic record on continental margins. In Nittrouer, C.A., Austin, J.A., Field, M.E., Kravitz, J.H., Syvitski, J.P.M., and Wiberg, P.L. (Editors). Continental Margin Sedimentation. Special Publication #37 of the International Association of Sedimentologists. Blackwell Publishing. Pg. 381-449.

20. Bell, R.E., Flood, R.D., Carbotte, S., Ryan, W.B.F., McHugh, C., Cormier, M., Versteeg, R., Bokuniewicz, H., Ferrini, V.L., Thissen, J., Ladd, J.W., and Blair, E., 2006. Benthic Habitat Mapping in the Hudson River Estuary, pp 51-65. In The Hudson River Estuary: Editors: J.S. Leviton and J.R. Waldman. Cambridge University Press.

21. Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone, M, Berne, S., Borre, M.K., Claypool, G., Damuth, J., Delius, H., Dickens, G., Flemings, P., Fulthorpe, C., Hesselbo, S., Hoyanagi, K., Katz, M., Drawinkel, H., Major, C., McCarthy, F., McHugh, C., Mountain, G., Oda, H., Olson, H., Pirmez, C., Svarda, C., Smart, C., Sohl, L., Vanderaveroet, P., Wei, W., and Whiting, B., 1998. Introduction: Oligocene to Pleistocene Eustatic Change at the New Jersey Continental Margin – A Test of Sequence Stratigraphy. In Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone et al., 1998. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 174A, pp 5-16. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.174A.101.1998

22. Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone, M, Berne, S., Borre, M.K., Claypool, G., Damuth, J., Delius, H., Dickens, G., Flemings, P., Fulthorpe, C., Hesselbo, S., Hoyanagi, K., Katz, M., Drawinkel, H., Major, C., McCarthy, F., McHugh, C., Mountain, G., Oda, H., Olson, H., Pirmez, C., Svarda, C., Smart, C., Sohl, L., Vanderaveroet, P., Wei, W., and Whiting, B., 1998.

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Explanatory Notes. In Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone et al., 1998. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 174A, pp 17-34. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.174A.102.1998

23. Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone, M, Berne, S., Borre, M.K., Claypool, G., Damuth, J., Delius, H., Dickens, G., Flemings, P., Fulthorpe, C., Hesselbo, S., Hoyanagi, K., Katz, M., Drawinkel, H., Major, C., McCarthy, F., McHugh, C., Mountain, G., Oda, H., Olson, H., Pirmez, C., Svarda, C., Smart, C., Sohl, L., Vanderaveroet, P., Wei, W., and Whiting, B., 1998. Site 1071. In Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone et al., 1998. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 174A, pp 37-97. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.174A.103.1998

24. Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone, M, Berne, S., Borre, M.K., Claypool, G., Damuth, J., Delius, H., Dickens, G., Flemings, P., Fulthorpe, C., Hesselbo, S., Hoyanagi, K., Katz, M., Drawinkel, H., Major, C., McCarthy, F., McHugh, C., Mountain, G., Oda, H., Olson, H., Pirmez, C., Svarda, C., Smart, C., Sohl, L., Vanderaveroet, P., Wei, W., and Whiting, B., 1998. Site 1072. In Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone et al., 1998. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 174A, pp 99-152. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.174A.104.1998

25. Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone, M, Berne, S., Borre, M.K., Claypool, G., Damuth, J., Delius, H., Dickens, G., Flemings, P., Fulthorpe, C., Hesselbo, S., Hoyanagi, K., Katz, M., Drawinkel, H., Major, C., McCarthy, F., McHugh, C., Mountain, G., Oda, H., Olson, H., Pirmez, C., Svarda, C., Smart, C., Sohl, L., Vanderaveroet, P., Wei, W., and Whiting, B., 1998. Site 1073. In Austin, J.R. Jr., Christie-Blick, N., Malone et al., 1998. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 174A, pp 152-191. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.174A.105.1998

26. Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Per-Gunnar, A., Aubry, M.-P, Burckle, L., Christensen, B. A., Compton, J., Damuth, J., Deconinck, J.-F., de Verteuil, L., Fulthorpe, C. S., Gartner, S., Guerin, G., Hesselbo, S.P., Hoppie, B., Katz, M.E., Kotake, N., Lorenzo, J.M., McCracken, S., McHugh, C. M., Quayle, W.C., Saito, Y., Snyder, S.W., ten Kate, W.G., Urbat, M., Van Fossen, M., Vecsei, A., 1994. Introduction. In Miller, Mountain and Shipboard Scientific Party. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 150. Eds., Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Poag, C.W., Twichell, D.C. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). pp 5-9. doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.150.101.1994

27. Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Per-Gunnar, A., Aubry, M.-P, Burckle, L., Christensen, B. A., Compton, J., Damuth, J., Deconinck, J.-F., de Verteuil, L., Fulthorpe, C. S., Gartner, S., Guerin, G., Hesselbo, S.P., Hoppie, B., Katz, M.E., Kotake, N., Lorenzo, J.M., McCracken, S., McHugh, C. M., Quayle, W.C., Saito, Y., Snyder, S.W., ten Kate, W.G., Urbat, M., Van Fossen, M., Vecsei, A., 1994. Explanatory Notes. In Miller, Mountain and Shipboard Scientific Party. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 150. Eds., Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Poag, C.W., Twichell, D.C. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). pp 21-42. doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.150.103.1994

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28. Hoppie, B. W. and Blum, P., Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Per-Gunnar, A., Aubry, M.-P, Burckle, L., Christensen, B. A., Compton, J., Damuth, J., Deconinck, J.-F., de Verteuil, L., Fulthorpe, C. S., Gartner, S., Guerin, G., Hesselbo, S.P., Katz, M.E., Kotake, N., Lorenzo, J.M., McCracken, S., McHugh, C. M., Quayle, W.C., Saito, Y., Snyder, S.W., ten Kate, W.G., Urbat, M., Van Fossen, M., Vecsei, A., 1994.Natural Gamma Measurements on ODP Cores: Introduction to Procedures with examples from Leg 150. In Miller, Mountain and Shipboard Scientific Party. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 150. Eds., Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Poag, C.W., Twichell, D.C. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). pp 52-59. doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.150.105.1994

29. Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Per-Gunnar, A., Aubry, M.-P, Burckle, L., Christensen, B. A., Compton, J., Damuth, J., Deconinck, J.-F., de Verteuil, L., Fulthorpe, C. S., Gartner, S., Guerin, G., Hesselbo, S.P., Hoppie, B., Katz, M.E., Kotake, N., Lorenzo, J.M., McCracken, S., McHugh, C. M., Quayle, W.C., Saito, Y., Snyder, S.W., ten Kate, W.G., Urbat, M., Van Fossen, M., Vecsei, A., 1994. Site 902. In Miller, Mountain and Shipboard Scientific Party. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 150. Eds., Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Poag, C.W., Twichell, D.C. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). pp 63-127. doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.150.106.1994

30. Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Per-Gunnar, A., Aubry, M.-P, Burckle, L., Christensen, B. A., Compton, J., Damuth, J., Deconinck, J.-F., de Verteuil, L., Fulthorpe, C. S., Gartner, S., Guerin, G., Hesselbo, S.P., Hoppie, B., Katz, M.E., Kotake, N., Lorenzo, J.M., McCracken, S., McHugh, C. M., Quayle, W.C., Saito, Y., Snyder, S.W., ten Kate, W.G., Urbat, M., Van Fossen, M., Vecsei, A., 1994. Site 903. In Miller, Mountain and Shipboard Scientific Party. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 150. Eds., Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Poag, C.W., Twichell, D.C. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). pp 130-205. doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.150.107.1994

31. Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Per-Gunnar, A., Aubry, M.-P, Burckle, L., Christensen, B. A., Compton, J., Damuth, J., Deconinck, J.-F., de Verteuil, L., Fulthorpe, C. S., Gartner, S., Guerin, G., Hesselbo, S.P., Hoppie, B., Katz, M.E., Kotake, N., Lorenzo, J.M., McCracken, S., McHugh, C. M., Quayle, W.C., Saito, Y., Snyder, S.W., ten Kate, W.G., Urbat, M., Van Fossen, M., Vecsei, A., 1994. Site 904. In Miller, Mountain and Shipboard Scientific Party. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 150. Eds., Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Poag, C.W., Twichell, D.C. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). pp 207-253. doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.150.108.1994

32. Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Per-Gunnar, A., Aubry, M.-P, Burckle, L., Christensen, B. A., Compton, J., Damuth, J., Deconinck, J.-F., de Verteuil, L., Fulthorpe, C. S., Gartner, S., Guerin, G., Hesselbo, S.P., Hoppie, B., Katz, M.E., Kotake, N., Lorenzo, J.M., McCracken, S., McHugh, C. M., Quayle, W.C., Saito, Y., Snyder, S.W., ten Kate, W.G., Urbat, M., Van Fossen, M., Vecsei, A., 1994. Site 905. In Miller, Mountain and Shipboard Scientific Party. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 150. Eds., Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Poag, C.W., Twichell, D.C. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). pp 255-308. doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.150.109.1994

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33. Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Per-Gunnar, A., Aubry, M.-P, Burckle, L., Christensen, B. A., Compton, J., Damuth, J., Deconinck, J.-F., de Verteuil, L., Fulthorpe, C. S., Gartner, S., Guerin, G., Hesselbo, S.P., Hoppie, B., Katz, M.E., Kotake, N., Lorenzo, J.M., McCracken, S., McHugh, C. M., Quayle, W.C., Saito, Y., Snyder, S.W., ten Kate, W.G., Urbat, M., Van Fossen, M., Vecsei, A., 1994. Site 906. In Miller, Mountain and Shipboard Scientific Party. Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Initial Reports 150. Eds. Mountain, G.S., Miller, K.G., Blum, P., Poag, C.W., Twichell, D.C. College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program). pp 309-357. doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.150.110.1994

c. Peer Reviewed International Abstracts and Workshops:

# Invited * Student

2019 American Geophysical Union Meeting, San Francisco, California 1. *Aziz, S., McHugh, C. M., Ryan, W. B. F., Henry, P., Kende, J., Delligatti, M., Tachikaway, K., 2019. New Insights into the Rapid Transformation of the Sea into a Lake, Marmara Sea, Turkey. Abstract #PP21D-1650. AGU San Francisco, CA.

2. McHugh, C. M., Seeber, L., Steckler, M. S., Schenck, R. J., Akhter, S. H., Rasbury, T., Wooton, K., Mondal, D. R., 2019. New Insights into Sediment Provenance and Climate along the IndoBurma Ranges, Eastern Bangladesh. Abstract #T11B-06 (oral). AGU, San Francisco, CA.

2019 Geological Society of America, Annual Meeting, Phoenix, Arizona

3. McHugh, C. M., Seeber, L., Rasbury, T., Strasser, M., Kanamatsu, T., Ikehara, K., Usami, K., 2019. Extracting the Sediment Record of Megathrust Ruptures in the Japan Trench Through Scientific Ocean Drilling. Abstract #332750. GSA, Phoenix, Arizona.

2019 International Association of Sedimentologists, Rome Italy September 2019

4. Seeber, L., McHugh, C. M., Rasbury, T., Strasser, M., Kanamatsu, T., Ikehara, K. 2019. Sedimentary Signature of Large Subduction Earthquakes: Japan, Sumatra, and Lombok. IAS, Rome, Italy. September 10-13 2019.

2019 Geological Society of America NE Section, Portland Maine

5. *Moore, McCain, McHugh, M. G., Usami, K., Kanamatsu, T., Ikehara, K., Strasser, M. 2019. The Sedimentary and Isotopic Signal of the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami and Prior Earthquakes, Japan Trench. Abstract #19-11 GSA-NE, Portland, Maine.

6. *Delligatti, M., McHugh, C. M., Kaiser, A., Nitsche, F., Kenna, T., 2019. Extracting the Record of Storms from the Sediments of Long Island Sound, NY. GSA-NE, Portland Maine Abstract #19-15.

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2019 Long Island Research Conference, Port Jefferson, NY April 15, 2019

7. McHugh, C. M, Nitsche, F. O., Kenna, T., Delligatti, M., Pallone, C., 2019. Sedimentary Environments of Central and Eastern Long Island Sound: New data derived from the Long Island Sound Seafloor Mapping Project.

2019 INQUA (International Union for Quaternary Research) Congress, Dublin Ireland

8. McHugh, C. M., Seeber, L., Rasbury, T., Strasser, M., Kanamatsu, T., Ikehara, K. Usami, K. 2019. Mega-Quakes at Subduction Boundaries: Their Isotopic Signature in Remobilized Sediment. Accepted for Oral presentation. INQUA Congress, Dublin, Ireland July 25-31, 2019.

2018 American Geophysical Union – Washington DC

1. McHugh, C. M., Seeber, L., Schenck, R. J., Steckler, M. S., Akhter, S. H., Tuladhar, P., Kaur, J., Rajapara, H., Singhvi, A. K., 2018. Assessing Multiple Liquefaction Events in the Dolai Syncline Valley: IndoBurma Ranges, NE Bangladesh. Abstract# T23C-0381. American Geophysical Union Meeting, Washington DC, USA.

2. Seeber, L., McHugh, C. M., Betka, P. M., Steckler, M. S., Grall, C. 2018. Late Pleistocene Growth of the Sylhet Foredeep from a Tilted Erosional Surface Flaniking Outer Anticlines of the Indo-Burma Fold-Belt. Abstract #T23C-0375 American Geophysical Union Meeting, Washington DC, USA.

3. *Pallone, C., Nitsche, F. O., Kenna, T., McHugh, C. M. 2018. Surface Sediment Texture in the Eastern Long Island Sound. Absract #EP13D-2127. American Geophysical Union Meeting, Washington DC, USA.

4. *Varkey, H. G., Mortlock, R. A., McHugh, C., Mondal, D. 2019. Investigating the Response of the Indian Monsoon During Climate Extremes with Stable Isotope Record in Corals. 2018. Abstract #ED13E-0799 American Geophysical Union Meeting, Washington DC, USA.

2018 Quebec, Canada

5. C. M. McHugh, L. Seeber, C. Paola, B. Dugan, M. Strasser, T. Kanamatsu, K. Ikehara, 2018. The sedimentary signature of shallow tsunamigenic earthquakes. International Sedimentology Conference. August 12-15, 2018. Quebec, Canada. Abstract # 184-wiwK-183

2018 Chiba, Japan

6. # C. M. McHugh, G. Tagliaro, C. S. Fulthorpe, M. Kominz, J. Groeneveld, Y. He, H. Takayanagi. 2018. Miocene aridity and sabkha development: Southeast Indian Ocean, offshore western Australia. Japan Geoscience Union Meeting #MIS01-11.

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7. *T. Ishiwa, Y. Yokoyama, C. M. McHugh, L. Reuning, S. J. Gallagher. 2018. The Holocene Australian Summer Monsoon variability revealed by IODP Expedition 356 sediments. Japan Geoscience Union Meeting #MIS08-P04

8. C. M. McHugh, T. Rasbury, L. Seeber, M. Strasser, T. Kanamatsu, K. Ikehara, S. Mustaque, K. Usami, R. Bopp, K. Wooton, J. Moernaut, A. Kioka, T. Schwestermann. 2018. The isotopic signature of remobilized sediment by Tohoku 2011 and prior earthquakes: Japan Trench and slope. Japan Geoscience Union Meeting #HCG23-04.

9. H. Takayangi, S. Wakaki, I. Irwan, N. Sekine, D. DeVleeschower, J. Groeneveld, K. Bogus, T. Ishiwa, T. Sato, B. L. Mamo, Y. He, C. M. McHugh, L. Reuning, W. Renema, B. A. Christensen, J. Henderiks, S. J. Gallagher, C. S. Fulthorpe, T. Ishikawa, Y. Yokoyama, Y. Iryu. 2018. History of the Leeuwin Current during the last 5 million years: Evidence from seawater Neodymium isotope variation. Japan Geoscience Union Meeting #MIS01-10.

10. *A. Kioka, T. Schwestermann, J. Moernaut, K. Ikehara, T. Kanamatsu, C. M. McHugh, T. I. Eglinton, M. Strasser. 2018. Carbon supply into the deep-sea Japan Trench associated with the 2011 Tohoku-oki earthquake. Japan Geoscience Union Meeting #HCG23-03.

2017 - Vienna, Austria

11. *Arata Kioka, Michael Strasser, Jasper Moernaut, Tobias Schwestermann, Ken Ikehara, Toshiya Kanamatsu, Cecilia M. McHugh and the R/V Sonne SO251A Science Party Team. 2017. Preliminary modelling of turbidity currents associated with the 2011 Tohoku-oki Earthquake. Geophysical Research Abstracts. Vol. 19, EGU2017-11937, 2017, EGU General Assembly 2017.

12. *Tobias Schwestermann, Hiske G. Fink, Gerold Wefer, Timo Fleischmann, Cecilia M. McHugh, Ken Ikehara, Toshiya Kanamatsu, Arata Kioka, Michael Strasser and the SO215A Science Party Team. XRF analyses of turbidites in the Japan Trench: Evidences of provenances? Geophysical Research Abstracts. Vol. 19, EGU2017-8873, 2017, EGU General Assembly 2017.

13. #Michael Strasser, Achim Kopf, Toshiya Kanamatsu, Jasper Moernaut, Ken Ikehara, Cecilia McHugh and the SO-251/1 Science Team. Extreme event archived in the geological record of the Japan Trench: New results from R/V Sonne Cruise SO-251 towards establishing J-TRACK paleoseismology. Geophysical Research Abstracts. Vol. 19, EGU2017-8821, 2017, EGU General Assembly 2017.

14. Toshiya Kanamatsu, Kazuko Usami, Cecilia McHugh and Ken Ikehara. Paleomagentic rock magnetic approach to the analyzing seismo-trubidite in the Tohoku-oki earthquake rupture zone. Geophysical Research Abstracts. Vol. 19, EGU2017-3959, 2017, EGU General Assembly 2017.

2017 - Tokyo, Japan

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15. Michael Strasser, Toshiya Kanamatsu, Ken Ikehara, Shuichi Kodaira, Cecilia McHugh and IODP Proposal 866 proponent group and SO215 Science Party. Using giant piston coring within IODP to track past earthquakes in the sedimentary record along the Japan Trench. Japan Geoscience Union Meeting. U03-P03

2017 - Toulouse, France

16. Jasper Moernaut, Ariana Molenaar, Gauvain Weimer, Cecilia McHugh, Maarten Van Daele, Martin Koelling, Marc De Batist, Michael Strasser. Earthquake-triggered remobilization of surficial slope sediments in lakes and ocean margins: Identification and significance. International Meeting of Sedimentology 2017. Toulouse, 10-12 October 2017, pg 617.

2017- AGU, New Orleans

17. *Jennifer Castaneda, Cecilia M. McHugh, Michelle A. Kominz, Stephen J. Gallagher, Michael Gurnis, Takeshige Ishiwa, Briony L. Mamo, Jorijntje Henderiks, Beth Anne Christensen, Jeroen, Groeneveld, Yusuke Yokoyama, Sharif Mustaque, Farah Iqbal, 2017. Pleistocene arid and wet climatic variability: Imprint of glacial climate, tectonics and oceanographic events in the sediments of the SE Indian Ocean, Western Australia. American Geophysical Union Meeting, New Orleans.PP31E-08.

18. Cecilia M. McHugh, Leonardo Seeber, Jasper Moernaut, Michael Strasser, Toshiya Kanamatsu, Ken Ikehara, Richard Bopp, Sharif Mustaque, Kazuko Usami, Tobias Schwestermann, Arata Kioka, L. McCain Moore and R/V Sonne 215A Science Party. 2017. Sedimentary signatures of submarine earthquakes: Deciphering the extent of sediment remobilization from the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami and 2010 Haiti earthquake. American Geophysical Union Meeting, New Orleans.EP12C-04.

19. Beth Christensen, Hideko Takayanagi, Benjamin Petrick, Takeshige Ishiwa, Jorijntje Henderiks, Jeroen Groeneveld, Briony Mamo, David De Vleeschouwer, Gerald Auer, Hanaa Deik, Craig Fulthorpe, Stephen Gallagher, Cecilia McHugh, Lars Reuning, Yusuke Yokoyama, 2017. Late Pleistocene Age Model for Site U1460, Perth Basin, SW Australian Shelf: Implications for Leeuwin Current History. American Geophysical Union Meeting, New Orleans. PP23C-1328.

20. *Takeshige Ishiwa, Yusuke Yokoyama, Cecilia M. McHugh, Lars Reuning, Stephen J. Gallagher. 2017. The history of the Australian monsoon on the Australian Northwest Shelf: preliminary results from IODP Expedition 356. American Geophysical Union Meeting, New Orleans. PP31E-07.

21. *G. Tagliaro, C. S Fulthorpe, S. J. Gallagher, C. M. McHugh, M. Kominz, L. L. Lavier. 2017. Climate Variability and Siliciclastic Deposition on a Carbonate Margin – Neogene of the Northwest Shelf of Australia. American Geophysical Union Meeting, New Orleans. PP23C- 1331.

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22. Briony L. Mamo, Cecilia McHugh, Willem Renema, Stephen Gallagher, Craig Fulthrope, Kara Bogus. 2017. Foraminiferal signatures of mass transport from the north-west continental shelf off Western Australia, IODP Expedition 356. American Geophysical Union Meeting, New Orleans. PP23C-1330.

23. Stephen J. Gallagher, Jackson McCaffrey, Malcolm William Wallace, Myra Keep, Craig Fulthorpe, Kara Bogus, Cecilia McHugh. 2017. Did the onset of high amplitude glacio- eustatic cycles triggered mass-transport processes on the Northwest Shelf of Australia from IODP expedition 356. American Geophysical Union Meeting, New Orleans. PP34B-07

24. Leonardo Seeber, Cecilia McHugh, Humayun Akhter, Robert Schenck, Michael Steckler, Basudeb Kumar, Anayet K. Shovon. 2017. Sand-venting by a M5.7 and prior earthquake below the Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta as a guide to a liquefaction-prone sedimentary setting and its implications for earthquake hazards. American Geophysical Union Meeting, New Orleans. T43C-0710.

2017 - Shangai, China

25. Gallagher, S.G., Fulthorpe, C.S., Bogus, K., Christensen, B.A., Groeneveld, J., McHugh, C.M., and Expedition 356 Scientists. 2017. The history of the Australian monsoon on the Australian Northwest Shelf: preliminary results from IODP Expedition 356. IODP-PAGES Workshop on Global Monsoon in Long-term Records. September 7-9, 2017. Tongji University, Shanghai, China.

2016 - AGU, San Francisco

26. McHugh, C.M., Groenveld, J., Henderiks, J., Renema, W., De Vleeschouwer, D., Christensen, B.A., Potts, D. C., Fulthorpe, C., S., Bogus, K., Gallagher, S.J., and Expedition 356 Scientists, 2016. Miocene wet and extreme arid climatic conditions in the Southeast Indian Ocean off Western Australia revealed by the lithology of Roebuck and Perth Basins. American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting San Francisco, PP42A-04.

27. Christensen, B.A., Renema, W., Henderiks, J., De Vleeschouwer, D., Groenveld, J., Castaneda, I., Reuning, L., Bogus, K., Auer, G., Ishiwa, T., McHugh, C.M., Fulthorpe, C.S., Gallagher, S. J., and IODP Expedition 356 Scientists, 2016 Indonesian Throughflow drove Australian climate from humid Pliocene to arid Pleistocene. American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting San Francisco, PP42A-01.

28. *Mondal, D.R., McHugh, C., Steckler, M.S., Seeber, L., Akhter, S.H., Mustaque, S., Knappett, P.S., 2016. Uplifted terraces along the Southeastern coast of Bangladesh reveal the extent of the 1762 earthquake surface deformation and potentially document prior earthquakes. American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting San Francisco T41B-2905.

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29. *Mustaque, S., McHugh, C., Mondal, D.R., Akhter, S.H., Iqbal, M., 2016. Modern sedimentation along the SE Bangladesh coast reveal surprisingly low accumulation rates. American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting San Francisco, GC23D-1266.

2016 - Japan

30. Groenveld, J., Henderiks, J., Renema, W., McHugh, C.M., De Vleeschouwer, D., Christensen, B.A., Fulthorpe, C., S., Reuning, L., Gallagher, S.J., Bogus, K., Auer, B., Ishiwa, T., and Expedition 356 Scientists. 2016. Australian shelf sediments reveal shifts in Miocene Southern Hemisphere Westerlies. Goldschmidt Conference, Yokohama, Japan.

31. Kanamatsu, T., Usami, K., McHugh, C., Ikehara, K., 2016. Paleomagnetic secular variation of deep sea sediment in Northeast Japan: challenge of dating of sedimentary sequence below CCD for paleoseismology in the rupture zone of 2011 Tohoku-oki earthquake. Japan Geoscience Union Meeting, Tokyo, Japan. Abstract #SEM05-04

2016 - Vienna, Austria

32. *Grall, C., Henry, P., Kende, J., Cagatay, M.N., Eris, K.K. Pailles, C., Sorlien, C., Shilington, D., McHugh, C., Steckler, M.S., 2016. Marine to lacustrine transition, mud volcanism and slope instability in an active tectonic setting: the MIS 5 to 4 transition in the Sea of Marmara, Turkey. Geophysical Research Abstracts, European Geophysical Union, EGU2016-11085

2015 – Tokyo Japan - AGU, San Francisco

33. McHugh, C. M., Kanamatsu, T., Seeber, L., Cormier, M.-H., Bopp, R., Ikehara, K., Usami, K., 2015. Spatial extent of sedimentation triggered by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake from short- lived radioisotope data, Japan Trench. Japan Geoscience Union Meeting. Tokyo, Japan.

34. *Mondal, D.R., McHugh, C.M., Mortlock, R.A., Steckler, M., Seeber, L., Mustaque, S., Goodbred, S., Akhter, S.H., 2015. Submergence and uplift associated to paleoearthquakes in the Northern Sunda Subduction system: Implications for future earthquakes. Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco. Abstract #NH23B-1878

35. Strasser, M., Ikehara, K., Usami, K., Kanamatsu, T., McHugh, C., 2015. The marine- geological fingerprint of the 2011 magnitude 9 Tohoku-oki earthquake. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco. Abstract #NH21E-03 (Invited)

36. *Lauture, E., McHugh, C.M., Nitsche, F., Kenna, T., 2015. The impact of anthropogenic activities on ecosystems of Long Island Sound, NY. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco. Abstract # GC13G-1241

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37. McHugh, C.M., Mansfield, V., Mondal, D., Seeber, L., Mustaque, S., Steckler, M., Mustaque, S., Akhter, S.H., 2015. Evidence for the tsuanmigenic 1762 earthquake in an extremely sedimented segment of the Sunda subduction/collision boundary, SE Bangladesh. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, CA. Abstract #NH21E-08

2014 – AGU, San Francisco

38. McHugh, C., Kanamatsu, T., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Bopp, R., Ikehara, K., Usami, K., 2014. Sedimentation triggered by the 2011 Tohoku Megathrust Earthquake along the Japan Trench. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco. Abstract T52A- 02

39. Seeber, L., Steckler, M., Akhter, S., Goodbred, S., Gale, J., McHugh, C., Ferguson, E., Mondal, D., Paola, C., Reitz, M., Wilson, C., 2014. Between Sunda subduction and Himalayan collision: fertility, people and earthquakes on the Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta (Invited). American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco. Abstract U21A-05

40. Kanamatsu, T., Ikehara, K., Strasser, M., Usami, K., McHugh, C., Fink, H., Nakamura, Y., Kodaira, S., 2014. Paleoseismology along the Japan Trench Subduction Zone: Deep- Sea Sediment Records of Earthquakes in Tohoku (Invited). American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco. Abstract T52A-01.

41. *Gurung, D., McHugh, C., Mondal, D., Seeber, L., Steckler, M., Bastas-Hernadez, A., Akhter, S., Mustaque, S., Goodbred, S., 2014. Evidence for a tsunami generated by the 1762 Great Arakan earthquake, Southeastern Bangladesh. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco. Abstract T43B-4732.

42. *Bastas-Hernadez, A., McHugh, C., Mondal, D., Seeber, L., Steckler, M., Gurung, D., Mustaque, S., Marsh, J., Akhter, S., 2014. Sedimentary Record of Paleodeformation of the Saint Martin Anticline Reveals the Interaction Between Tectonics, Sedimentation Processes and Relative Sea-level Changes: Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta Burma Arc Collision, SE Bangladesh. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco T43B-4726.

43. *Usami, K., Ikehara, K., Kanamatsu, T., McHugh, C., 2014. Seismo-turbidites in the Japan Trench inner slope. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco. Abstract T43B-4716.

44. *Mondal, D., McHugh, C., Mortlock, R., Gurung, D., Bastas-Hernadez, A., Steckler, M., Seeber, L., Mustaque, S., Goodbred, S., Akhter, S., Saha, P., 2014. Paleoseismic Records of 1762 and Similar Prior Earthquakes Along the South-Eastern Coast of Bangladesh. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco. Abstract T43B-4712.

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45. *Wright, V., Hornbach, M. J., McHugh, C., Mann, P., 2014. Factors contributing to recent water level rise in Hispaniola Lakes: Preliminary Results. Geophysicists With No Borders Annual Meeting. Extended abstract.

2014 - Marseille, France

46. *Kende, J., Henry, P., Grall, C., Cagatay, M. N., Sorlien, C., Cifici, G., McHugh, C., Saritas, H. 2014. Sedimentary records of hydrology and fault slip in the Marmara Sea basins. Conference on the Holocene, July 7-8, 2014, Aix-Marseille University, Marseille, France.

2014 – Geneva, Switzerland

47. McHugh, C., Kanamatsu, T., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Bopp, R., Ikehara, K., Usami, K., 2014. The Sedimentation record of the 2011 Tohoku megathrust earthquake along the Japan Trench. 19th International Sedimentological Congress, Geneva, Switzerland. Abstracts with Programs page 36. Abstract No S1-O13.

48. McHugh, C. M, Seeber, L., Cormier, M.-H., Hornbach, M., 2014. Submarine paleoseismology along transform boundaries: Enriquillo Plantain Garden Fault, Canal du Sud, Haiti and North Anatolia Fault, Marmara Sea, Turkey. 19th International Sedimentological Congress, Geneva, Switzerland. Abstracts with Programs page 54. Abstract No S1-P4.

2014 – Tokyo, Japan

49. *Usami, K., Ikehara, K., McHugh, C., Kanamatsu, T., 2014. Turbidites collected from the Japan Trench inner slope during the NT13-19 cruise. Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2014. MIS33-03

2013 – AGU, San Francisco

50. C. M. McHugh, C. Fulthrope, K. Hoyanagi, P. Blum. 2013. Pleistocene seismic sequences may result from eustatic change but can they be used for global correlations? New insights from the Canterbury Basin, New Zealand. American Geophysical Union Meeting. Abstract #PP53B-1995

51. L. Seeber, E. Ferguson, H. Akhter, M. Steckler, D. Mondal, J. Gale, C. Mchugh, C. Paola, S. Goodbred, 2013. The Brahmaputra delta and its merger into an accretion wedge in advance of the progressive suturing between India and Asia. American Geophysical Union Meeting. Abstract #EP33B-0892

52. M. S Steckler, S. L. Goodbred, S. H. Akhter, L. Seeber, M. D. Reitz, C. Paola, S. L. Nooner, S. DeWolf, E. K. Ferguson, J. Gale, S. Hossain, M. Howe, W.-Y. Kim, C. M. McHugh, D. R. Mondal, A. L. Petter, J. Pickering, R. Sincavage, L. A. Williams, C. Wilson, M. A. Zumberge., 2013. Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta: Balance of Subsidence, Sea level and

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Sedimentation in a Tectonically-Active Delta. American Geophysical Union Meeting. Abstract #EP33D-01

53. *P. Hosseini, C. M. McHugh, B. A. Christensen, J. Dutton, B. Brownawell, D. Gurung. 2013. Effects of Super Strom Sandy on Depositional Environments Offshore Long Island, New York. American Geophysical Union Meeting. Abstract #OS31A-1694

54. *V. D. Wright, M. J. Hornbach, C. M. McHugh, Y. Asilis, M. Montes. 2013. Lake Enriquillo water level history and implications for future flooding in the Southwestern Dominican Republic. American Geophysical Union Meeting. Abstract #NH51C-1625.

55. B. Christensen, J. A. Goff, J. A. Austin, C. M. Browne, S. Saustrup, N. S. Duzgoren-Aydin, R. F. Flood, C. McHugh, J. Dutton, P. Hosseini, B. Brownawell., 2013. Soupy surface muds: a probable Sandy storm horizon with a potential source fingerprint. American Geophysical Union Meeting. Abstract #OS31A-1697

56. *J. K. Rios, C. M. McHugh, M. J. Hornbach, P. Mann, V. D. Wright, D. Gurung. 2013. Holocene activity of the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden Fault in Lake Enriquillo derived from seismic stratigraphy. American Geophysical Union Meeting. Abstract #T23E-2629

57. *D. R. Mondal, C. M. McHugh, M. S. Steckler, L. Seeber, S. H. Akhter, R. A. Mortlock, 2013. Coseismic Deformation of the Great 1762 Arakan Subduction Earthquake Along South-Eastern coast of Bangladesh. American Geophysical Union Meeting. #T23C-2609

2012 – AGU, San Francisco

58. McHugh, C. M., Fulthorpe, C., Blum, P., Chow Y., Mishkin, K. 2012. Global Se-level Changes Revealed in the Sediments of the Canterbury Basin, New Zealand, IODP Expedition 317. 2012. American Geophysical Union Meeting. Abstract OS51B-1874.

59. *Rios, J.K., McHugh, C.M., Seeber, L., Blair, S., Sorlien, C.C., 2012. Latest Pleistocene to Holocene Evolution of the Baie de Port au Prince, Haiti. 2012. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting. Abstract T41A-2572.

2012 Turkey (Istanbul, Izmir)

60. McHugh, C. M., Seeber, L. Cormier, M.-H., Hornbach, M., Momplaisir, R., Sorlien, C., Steckler, M., Waldhauser, F., 2012. Submarine Paleoseismology along Transform Boundaries: A sesimotectonic signal from offshore sedimentation of the 2010 Haiti Earthquake. Paeloseismology along the North Anatolia Fault meeting. Istanbul Technical University October 8 -12, 2012. Abstract with Programs pg 4.

61. C. M. McHugh, L. Seeber, N. Braudy, A. Hakimian, M. N. Çağatay, P. Henry. 2012. Holocene ruptures along the North Anatolia Fault in the Marmara Sea, Turkey:

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Sedimentary processes, spatial extent and age. International Earth Science Colloquium on the Aegean Region. Izmir, Turkey. October 1-5, 2012. Abstract 183-323-2

62. H. Kurt, C. C Sorlien, L. Seeber, M. S Steckler, D. J Shillington, G. Çifçi, S. Okay, M.-H. Cormier, O. Atgin, S. Gurcay, D. Dondurur, C. Imren, C. M McHugh. 2012. Steady late Quaternary slip on the North Anatolian fault in Cinarcik Basin, Marmara Sea. International Earth Science Colloquium on the Aegean Region. Izmir, Turkey. October 1-5, 2012. Abstract 160-450-1

63. D. J. Shillington, L. Seeber, C. C. Sorlien, M. S. Steckler, H. Kurt, D. Dondurur, G. Çifçi, Caner İmren, M-H. Cormier, C. M.G. McHugh, S. Gürçay, D. Poyraz, S. Okay, O. Atgın. 2012. Evidence for widespread gravitational creep and abundant gas in the Sea of Marmara transform basin from the TAMAM project. International Earth Science Colloquium on the Aegean Region. Izmir, Turkey. October 1-5, 2012. Abstract 160-450-1

64. L. Seeber, C. C Sorlien, M-H. Cormier, D. J. Shillington, M. S Steckler, G. Çifçi, S. Okay, H. Kurt, C. M McHugh, B. Barin, O. Atgin, S. Gurcay, D. Dondurur, C. Imren. 2012. Horizontal offsets on the North Anatolian fault (NAF) coupled with basin formation in the Marmara Sea. International Earth Science Colloquium on the Aegean Region. Izmir, Turkey. October 1-5, 2012. Abstract 242-1175-1

65. C. C. Sorlien, L. Seeber, M. S. Steckler, D. J. Shillington, H. Kurt, G. Çifçi, S. Okay, M.- H. Cormier, B. Barin, O. Atgin, S. Gurcay, D. Dondurur, C. Imren, C. M. McHugh, 2012. Quaternary basin formation along the North Anatolian Fault System in Marmara Sea, Turkey. International Earth Science Colloquium on the Aegean Region. Izmir, Turkey. October 1-5, 2012. Abstract 229-470-1.

2011 – AGU, San Francisco

66. Cormier, M.H., Seeber, L., C.C. Sorlien, M. Steckler, S. Gulick, C. McHugh, and M. Hornbach, Distributed active folding across the northern Caribbean plate boundary derived from the combined analysis of SRTM topography and seismic profiling, AGU fall meeting, San Francisco, CA, 2011. Abstract # T31F-03

67. McHugh, C. M., Seeber, L., Cormier, M.-H., Hornbach, M. H., Momplaisir, R., Waldhauser, F., Sorlien, C., Steckler, M., Gulick, S. 2011b. A Seismo-tectonic Signal From Offshore Sedimentation: The 2010 Haiti Earthquake and Prior Events. AGU fall Meeting, San Francisco CA, T33G-2492.

2010 – AGU, San Francisco

68. Cormier, M.H., C.M.G. McHugh, S.P. Gulick, N. Braudy, N. Dieudonne, J. Diebold, R. Douilly, M. Hornbach, H.E. Johnson, M. Davis, K. Mishkin, L. Seeber, C.C. Sorlien, M. Steckler, Vertical Deformation of Late Quaternary Features Across Port-au-Prince Bay, Haiti, AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco CA, abstract U13A-0005, 2010.

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69. *Johnson, H.E., M. Hornbach, M.H. Cormier, C.M.G. McHugh, S.P.S. Gulick, N. Braudy, M. Davis, N. Dieudonne, J. Diebold, R. Douilly, K. Mishkin, L. Seeber, C.C. Sorlien, M.S. Steckler, S.J. Symithe, J. T, Nearshore geophysical investigation of the underwater trace of the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden Fault Following the 12 January 2010 Haiti earthquake, AGU fall meeting, San Francisco CA, abstract U13A-0010, 2010.

70. McHugh, C. M. G., S. Gulick, M.-H. Cormier, N. Dieudonne, J. Diebold, R. Douilly, M. Hornbach, H. Johnson, K. Mishkin, L. Seeber, C. Sorlien, M. Steckler, S. Symithe, Project REPONS: Offshore Faults, Tectonic Deformation and Turbidite Record in Response to the January 12 2010 Earthquake, Haiti, AGU fall Meeting, San Francisco CA, abstract U13A- 0006, 2010a.

2010 Fos do Igassu – Brazil

71. McHugh, C. M., S. Gulick, M.H. Cormier, N. Braudy, M. Davis, N. Dieudonne, J. Diebold, R. Douilly, M. Hornbach, H. Johnson, K. Mishkin, L. Seeber, C. Sorlien, M. Steckler, S. Symithe, J. Templeton, Project REPONS: Offshore Faults, Tectonic Deformation Mapping and Turbidite Record Reconnaissance in Response to the January 12 2010 Earthquake, Haiti, AGU Meeting of the Americas, Fos do Igassu, Brazil - special session on "The 2010 Haiti Earthquake", 2010. (Invited)

2010 - Obergurgl, Austria

72. McHugh, C., 2010. The submarine record of the January 12, 2010 earthquake, Haiti: paleoseismic implications. 2010. European Science Foundation Research Conference: Submarine Paleoseismology: The Offshore Search of Large Holocene Earthquakes. September 11-16, 2010 Obergurgl, Austria. (Invited)

2010 - Dominican Republic

73. McHugh, C.M., S. Gulick, M.H. Cormier, N. Braudy, M. Davis, N. Dieudonne, J Diebold, R Douilly, M Hornbach, H. Johnson, K Mishkin, L Seeber, C Sorlien, M Steckler, S Symithe, J Templeton, Project REPONS: Paleoseismic Significance of Submarine Faults, Tectonic Deformation and Turbidite Record in Response to the January 12 2010 Earthquake, Haiti," The 2010 Haiti earthquake: an Alert for Hispaniola, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, 2010.

74. Gulick, S. and REPONS Science Team (N. Braudy, M.H. Cormier, M.B. Davis, J.B. Diebold, N. Dieudonné, R. Douilly, S.P.S. Gulick, M.J. Hornbach, H.E. Johnson, C.M.G. McHugh, K. Mishkin, L. Seeber, C.C. Sorlien, M.S. Steckler. S.J. Symithe, F.W. Taylor, J. Templeton) 2010, Vertical deformation, liquefaction, and tsunamigenesis from January 12th Haiti event: Results from offshore REPONS team, at The 2010 “The 2010 Haiti earthquake: an Alert for Hispaniola”, July 12-15, 2010, Santo Domingo, Dominican

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Republic.

75. Sorlien, C.C., L. Seeber, M.H. Cormier, M. Davis, J. Diebold, N. Dieudonne, S.S.P. Gulick, M. Hornbach, C. McHugh, S. Steckler, Thrust-folding, tilting and subsidence: California borderland and Haiti, “The 2010 Haiti earthquake: an Alert for Hispaniola”, July 12-15, 2010, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, 07-13-2010.

76. Steckler, M.S., L. Seeber, F. Waldhauser, REPONS Science Team and TAMAM Science Team, 2010, Effects of en echelon and bending strike-slip faults from Turkey, Haiti and other areas and relations to main shock and aftershocks, at “The 2010 Haiti earthquake: an Alert for Hispaniola” conference. Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic July 12-15, 2010.

2005 - 2007 AGU, San Francisco

77. McHugh, C. M., Cormier, M., Pant, H., Varekamp, J., Marchese, P., Charles, T., Bowman, A., Vargas, W., Balbas, A., 2007. History of Contamination and Coastal Hazards in Western Long Island Sound, NY. EOS Trans. AGU 87 (52), Abstract OS23B-07.

78. *Damas, C., Johnson, L., McHugh, C., Marchese, P. J. 2007. Increasing Diversity in the Geosciences at the City University of New York. EOS Trans. AGU 88 (52), Abstract ED41B-0493.

79. *Gurung, D., McHugh, C. M., Ryan, W. B., Giosan, L., Mart, Y., Cagatay, N. 2006. Late Pleistocene-Holocene climate change inferred from fossil fauna in the Marmara Sea, Turkey. 2006. EOS Trans. AGU 87 (52), PP23B-1748.

80. McHugh, C. M., Cormier, M., Marchese, P., Zheng, Y., Kohfeld, K. E. 2006. Partnership to Enhance Diversity in Marine Geosciences: Holocene Climate and Anthropogenic Changes from Long Island Sound, NY. EOS Trans. AGU 87 (52), Abstract ED33C-03

81. McHugh, C.M., Cormier, M., Marchese, P., Zheng, Y., Stewart, G. Acosta, V., Bowman, A., Cortes, A., Leon, L. Rosa, M., Semple, D., Thaker, N. Vargas, W., Williams, L. 2006. Late Quaternary Depositional History and Anthropogenic Impacts of Western Long Island Sound, NY. EOS Trans. AGU 87 (52), OS31B-1638.

82. McHugh, C. M., Zheng, Y., Kohfeld, K. E., Marchese, P., Cormier, M., Warkentine, B. 2005. Partnership to Enhance Diversity in Marine Geosciences: Holocene Climate and Anthropogenic Changes from Long Island Sound, NY. EOS Trans. AGU 86 (52), Abstract ED13A-1135.

83. McHugh, C. M., Mart, Y., Ryan, W. B., Giosan, L., Gurung, D., Cagatay, M. N., Vachtman, D., Sancar, U., Eris, K., Burckle, L., Capotondi, L. 2005. Reconnections of Marginal Basins to the World Ocean: New Data from the Marmara Sea. EOS Trans. AGU 86 (52), Abstract PP33A-1548.

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84. McHugh, C. M., Zheng, Y., Kohfeld, K. E., Marchese, P., Cormier, M., Warkentine, B. 2005. Partnership to Enhance Diversity in Marine Geosciences: Holocene Climate and Anthropogenic Changes from Long Island Sound, NY. EOS Trans. AGU 86 (52), Abstract ED13A-1135.

85. Giosan, L., Mart, Y., McHugh, C. M., Vachtman, D., Cagatay, N. M., Kadir, E. K., Ryan, W. B. 2005. Megafloods in Marginal Basins: New Data from the Black Sea. EOS Trans. AGU 86 (52), Abstract PP32A-03.

86. *Hartin, C. A., McHugh, C. M. G., Gould, H., and Gurung, D., 2005. Drainage systems associated with the latest Pleistocene-Holocene paleoshoreline on the New York – New Jersey Continental Margin, NE GSA Abstracts with Programs Paper No. 82373

2005 - EGU Vienna, Austria

87. *Sorichetta A., Taramelli A., Seeber L., McHugh C. M. G., Cormier M.-H., 2005. Modeling drainage perturbation related to the propagation of the North Anatolian Fault (NAF) in the Marmara Sea region (Turkey) with Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data. Terrain analysis using DTM and landslides (Poster Only Session), European Geosciences Union, General Assembly. Vienna, April 24-29, 2005. Geophysical Research Abstract, Vol. 7, Abstract no. 03324.

2004 – AGU, San Francisco

88. McHugh, C. M. G., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Cagatay, N., Dutton, J., Gurung, D., 2004. Developing tools for submarine earthquake geology along the North Anatolia Fault in the Marmara Sea, Turkey. EOS, Trans. AGU, 85 (47), T12B-05.

89. Kenna, T.C., Chillrud, S. N., Chaky, D.A., Simpson, H. J., McHugh, C. M., Shuster, E. L., Bopp, R. F., 2004, Determining Sources and transport of nuclear contamination in Hudson River sediments with Plutonium, Neptunium, and Cesium isotope ratios. EOS, Trans. AGU, 85 (47), H411-05

90. *Livelli, K., Pekar, S. F., McHugh, C., 2004. Deciphering the depositional history of the Hudson Estuary and estimating summertime precipitation changes in the New York City area from the mid to late Holocene (7-1 ka). EOS, Trans. AGU, 85 (47), PP43A-0593

2004 - AGU Nice, France

91. McHugh, C. M. G., Gurung, D., Ryan, W.B.F., Sancar, U., Burckle, L., Cagatay, M. N., Capotondi, L., R/V Urania, MARMARA 2001 team, 2004. Late Pleistocene to Holocene lacustrine to marine transition in the Marmara Sea: Implications for climate and water mass exchange. Geophysical Research Abstracts, Vol. 6, 05897.

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2003 - AGU Nice, France

92. McHugh, C. M. G., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Cagatay, M. N., Lozefski, G., Capotondi, L., and Polonia, A., 2003. Earthquake geology along the North Anatolia fault zone in the Marmara Sea, Geophysical Research Abstracts, Vol. 5, 07478.

93. Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Polonia, A., Cagatay, M.N., Emre, O., McHugh, C. M. G., Bortoluzzi, G., Gorur, N., 2003, Geometry of the North Anatolia Fault beneath the Gulf of Izmit and extent of the 1999 seafloor rupture. Geophysical Research Abstracts, v., 5, 13460.

94. Cagatay, M. N., Gorur, N., Polonia, A., Demirbag, E., Sakinc, M., Cormier, M.-H., Capotondi, L., McHugh, C., Emre, O., Eris, K., 2003. Sea Level changes and depositional environments in the Izmit Gulf, eastern Marmara Sea, during the late glacial-Holocene period. Geophysical Research Abstracts, Vol. 5, 01305

95. Newman, K., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., McHugh, C. M. G., Ryan, W. B. F., Polonia, A., Cagatay, M.N., Emre, O., 2003, Using submerged shorelines to constrain recent tectonics of the Ganos shelf, western Marmara Sea. Geophysical Research Abstracts, v., 5, 13794.

2004 – Florence Italy

96. *Dutton, J., McHugh, C.M.G., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Cagatay, N., R/V Urania MARMARA 2001 Scientific Team, 2004. Submarine earthquake geology along the Ganos segment of the North Anatolia Fault in the Marmara Sea. 32 IGC, Florence, Italy. G16.01- 198-10.

97. McHugh, C. M. G., Mountain, G. S., Christie-Blick, N., Pekar, S., Gould, H., Gurung, D., and Hartin, C., 2004. Evidence for the latest Pleistocene-Holocene shoreline along the New York- New Jersey Continental Margin. 32 IGC, Florence, Italy. T15.01-234-44.

2004 – GSA Students

98. *Dutton, J., McHugh, C., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Cagatay, N., Okay, N., Ziangos, K., 2004. Developing tools for paleoseismology in the submarine environment, case studies: North Anatolia fault zone, Marmara Sea and El Pilar fault, Cariaco Basin, Venezuela. GSA Abstracts with Programs Vol. 36, No. 2, Paper No. 53-30.

99. *Lozefski, G., McHugh, C., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Cagatay, N., Okay, N., R/V Urania MARMARA 2000 team, 2004. Provenance of turbidite sands in the Marmara Sea, Turkey. GSA Abstracts with Programs Vol. 36, No.2, Paper No. 53-32.

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100. *Brownlee, S., McHugh, C., Burckle, L., Pekar, S. 2004. Diatoms as proxies for climate change in the Hudson River, New York. GSA Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 36, No.2, Paper No. 53-6.

101. *Gould, H., McHugh, C. M. G., Mountain, G. S., Christie-Blick, N., Pekar, S., Gurung, D, Hartin, C., 2004. Evidence for the latest Pleistocene-Holocene shoreline along the New York- New Jersey Continental Margin. GSA Abstracts with Programs Vol. 36, No.2, Paper No. 19- 20.

2002 - 2003 Ankara, Turkey

102. C. M. G. McHugh, M.-H. Cormier, L. Seeber, M.N. Cagatay, G. Losfezki, 2003. Earthquake geology along the North Anatolia Fault Zone in the Marmara Sea. Abstract P1-6, pg 5, September 3, Ankara, Turkey. (Invited)

103. Marie-Hélène Cormier, Leonardo Seeber, Cecilia M. G. McHugh, M. Namik Cagatay, Omer Emre, Alina Polonia, Luca Gasperini, Giovanni Bortoluzzi, Naci Gorur, 2003. Geometry of the North Anatolian Fault Beneath Izmit Bay (Eastern Marmara Sea) from Multibeam Bathymetry Data, Abstract 8, pg. 4, September 3, Ankara, Turkey.

104. Amorosi, A., Cagatay, M.N., Capotondi, L., Colalongo, M.L., Fiorini, F., McHugh, C., Pasini, G., Polonia, A., Ricci Lucchi, M., Vaiani, S.C., 2002. Late Quaternary Paleogeographic evolution of the Gulf of Izmit (Marmara Sea). Ankara Meeting, Turkey.

2002 AGU San Francisco

105. Christie-Blick, N., Mountain, G.S., Ghosh, A., McHugh, C.M.G., Pekar, S.F., and Schock, S.G., 2002, New insights on Late Pleistocene sedimentation at the New Jersey margin based on Chirp sonar profiles and vibracores. EOS Transaction AGU, v. 83, no. 47, p. F727

106. *Jones, M., McHugh, C.M.G., Burckle, L., Pekar, S., Pereira, G., Ryan, W.B.F., Bell, R., Carbotte, S., 2002, Decadal to Millennial Sedimentation Patterns of Hudson River Estuary. EOS Transaction AGU, v. 83, no. 47, p F788.

107. Pekar, S. F., McHugh, C. M. G., Christie-Blick, N., Jones, M. C., Lynch-Stieglitz, J., Using salinity estimates and sedimentary data to evaluate the processes that controlled the evolution of Hudson River estuary during the mid-Holocene, 2002, EOS, Transactions, AGU, v. 83, no. 47, p F787.

108. McHugh, C.M.G., Pekar, S.F., Ryan, W.B.F., Carbotte, S., Bell, R., and Burckle, L. 2002. Infilling of the Hudson River estuary during the latest Holocene (3000BP to present): Implications for Estuarine stratigraphic models. EOS Transaction AGU, v.83, no.47, p F.787.

2002 Istanbul, Turkey

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109. McHugh, C. M. G., Cagatay, N., Capotondi, L., Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., Polonia, A., Gasperini, L., Gorur, N., Lozefski, G., and the Scientific Parties, 2002, Turbidite and mass- transport deposits as records of paleoseismology: Marmara Sea. in International Symposium on Earth Sciences and Engineering, Istanbul.

110. Gasperini, L., McHugh, C., Cagatay, N., Polonia, A., Capotondi, L., Amorosi, A., Seeber, L., Cormier, M.-H., Gorur, N., Emre, O., and the Scientific Party. Active faults and geological record of earthquakes in the Gulf of Izmit (Sea of Marmara). in International Symposium on Earth Sciences and Engineering, Istanbul, 2002.

111. Capotondi, L., Cagatay, N., McHugh, C., Polonia, A., Amorosi, A., Seeber, L., Cormier, M.-H., Gorur, N., Emre, O., and the Scientific Parties, 2002, Foraminiferal distribution in cores from Marmara Sea: Environmental and paleoceanographical reconstructions. in International Symposium on Earth Sciences and Engineering, Istanbul.

112. Cagatay, N., Gorur, N., Polonia, A., Demirbag, E., Sakmc, M., Cormier, M.-H., Emre, O., Capotondi, L., McHugh, C., Erin, K., and the scientific party, 2002, Sea level changes in the Izmit Gulf, eastern Marmara Sea, during the late glacial-Holocene period. in International Symposium on Earth Sciences and Engineering, Istanbul,

2001 – AGU, San Francisco

113. McHugh, C.M., Polonia, A., Cagatay, M.N., Cormier, M.H., Seeber, L., Ryan, W.B., Gasperini, L., Ligi, M., Bonatti, E., Bortoluzzi, G., Capotondi, L., Blasi, A., Fabretti, P., Marozzi, G., Magagnoli, A., Penitenti, D., Busetti, M., Gorur, N., Emre, O., Okay, N., Sarikavak, K., Kurt, H., Imren, C., Eris, K., Tok, B., Ozer, N., 2001. The feasibility of submarine paleoseismology: The North Anatolian fault beneath the Marmara Sea (Turkey) as a natural laboratory. Trans. of AGU, v. 82, No. 47, p F930.

114. Mountain, G.S., McHugh, C. M. G., Olson, H., Monteverde, D. 2001. Glacioeustasy ain’t what it used to be: The search for controls on stratigraphic architecture. Eos, Trans., AGU v. 82, No. 47, p. F749.

115. Polonia, A., Cormier, M.-H., Cagatay, N., Bortoluzzi, G., Bonatti, E., Gasperini, L., Ligi, M. Capotondi, L., Seeber, L., McHugh, C., Ryan, W.B.F., Gorur, N., Emre, O., Tok, B. and the MARMARA 2000 AND 2001 scientific parties, 2001. Exploring submarine earthquake geology in the Marmara Sea. EOS Transaction AGU, 82 (21) 235-236.

2001 – GSA, Boston

116. McHugh, C. M. G., Ryan, W. B. F., Pekar, S., Zheng, Y., Bell, R., Carbotte, S., Chillrud, S., and Rubenstone, J., 2001. Dynamic equilibrium of the Hudson estuary revealed by the sedimentary record. GSA Ann. Meeting Abs. Progr. Vol. 33, No. 6, p. A453.

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117. *Jones, M. C., Pekar, S. F., McHugh, C. M. G., Lynch-Stieglitz, J., Rubenstone, J. L., Bell, R. E., and Carbotte, S., 2001. Developing an integrated approach in understanding the evolution of the Hudson estuary. GSA Ann. Meeting Abs. Progr. Vol. 33, No. 6, p. A453.

118. Carbotte, S., Bell, R., McHugh, C., Rubenstone, J., Ryan, W., Nitsche, F., Chillrud, S., and Slagle, A., 2001. Recent evolution of the Hudson estuary within the Tappan Zee. GSA Annual Meeting Abs. With Progr. Vol. 33, No. 6, p. A453.

1999 - 2000 – AGU, San Francisco

119. McHugh, C. M. G., Mountain, G. S. Damuth, J.E.D., and Wei, W. 2000. Delta Progradation within a transgression of sea-level: Examples from the New Jersey Continental Margin. EOS Transactions, AGU V 81, No. 48, p. F631.

120. Mountain, G. S., McHugh, C. M. G., Olson, H. C., and Damuth, J. E., 2000. Eustatic control of slope deposition: Inferences from late Pleistocene age determinations and seismic character at ODP Site 1073. Offshore New Jersey. EOS Transactions, AGU, V 80, No. 46, p F 583(P).

121. Carbotte, S. C., McHugh, C., Ryan, W., Cormier, M., Bell, R. E., Flood, R. D., Ladd, J. W., Nieder, W. C., Blair, E. A., 1999. High resolution mapping of the Hudson Estuary. EOS Transactions, AGU V 80, No. 46, p. F518

122. McHugh, C. M. G., Olson, H. C., 1999. The Quaternary Record: Isotopic calibration of Sea- level change and paleoclimate, New Jersey, EOS Transactions, AGU, V 80, No. 46, p F581

123. McHugh, C. M. G., Olson, H. Balsam, W., Damuth, J. E., Ben-Eliezer, B., and Breger, M., 1999, High-resolution Pleistocene climatic variability revealed by sediments from the New Jersey Slope. American Ass. of Petroleum Geologists Annual Convention -San Antonio, TX, Technical Program

1998 S.E.P.M. - Sicily, Italy

124. McHugh, C. M. G., Damuth, J. E., and Mountain, G. S., 1998. Oligocene to Recent mass- wasting facies of the New Jersey Continental Margin Reveal History of Within a Seismic Stratigraphic Framework. S.E.P.M. Conference on “Strata and Sequences on Shelves and Slopes”. Sicily, Italy.

1991-1997 Abstracts

125. McHugh, C. M. G., Patterson, T., Snyder, S. W., Miller, K. G., 1997. Dynamics of Chesapeake Bay impact revealed by upper Eocene ejecta deposit on the New Jersey continental margin. GSA Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 29, No. 6.

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126. McHugh, C. M. G., Miller, K. G., and Browning, J., 1997. Effects of relative sea-level changes on the diagenesis of Eocene sediment, New Jersey slope and coastal plain. American Ass. of Petroleum Geologists Annual Convention - Dallas, TX, Technical Program p A-80.

127. Glass, B. P., and McHugh, C. M. G., 1996. More Upper Eocene (North American?) tektites and impact ejecta off New Jersey. Lunar and Planetary Science Conference XXVII. p 423-424.

128. McHugh, C. M. G., Damuth, J. E., Mountain, G. S., 1996, Mass-transport deposits of the New Jersey continental margin and their correlation to slope morphology and sequence boundaries. American Ass. of Petroleum Geologists Annual Convention - San Diego, CA, Technical Program p. 36.

129. McHugh, C. M. G., Pirmez, C., and Snyder, S. W., 1995, Upper Eocene tektites of the New Jersey continental margin: Deposited from single impact, EOS Transactions, AGU, v. 76, no.17, p. S188.

130. McHugh, C. M. G., Damuth, J. E., Mountain, G. S. and Leg 150 Shipboard Scientific Party, 1994, Pleistocene and Miocene mass-transport deposits on the continental slope and rise and their relationship to sequence boundaries: Initial results of the New Jersey sea-level transect, ODP Leg 150. American Association of Petroleum Geologists Annual Convention - Denver, CO, Technical Program p. 15.

131. McHugh, C. M. and Ryan, W. B. F. 1993, Tectonic and sedimentary influences on the morphology of the Monterey Canyon system, off-shore Monterey Bay, California, EOS Trans., AGU v.74, no.16, p.294.

132. McHugh, C. M., and Ryan, W. B. F., 1992, Sedimentary features reveal mass-wasting and gravity flow processes on the Monterey Fan, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Annual Convention - New Orleans, LA. Technical Program p. 20

133. McHugh, C. M., Ryan, W. B. F., Pratson, L., Keeley, C. D., Mitchell, N., Reed, D. L., and Greene, H. G., 1991, Sonar imagery of the Monterey Canyon region and associated deep-sea fan revealing an entrenched meander evolution, The Geological Society of America, Cordilleran Section (Abstracts with Prog), v. 23, no. 2, p. 77.

134. McHugh, C. M., Ryan, W. B. F., Schreiber, B. C., Pratson, L., Pirmez, C., and Miller, K. G., 1991, U. S. east coast continental slope fractures and neptunian dikes, EOS Transactions, American Geophysical Union, v. 72, no. 17, p. 164.

d. Reports

1. Nitsche, F.O., Kenna, T., McHugh, C.M., Poppe, L., 2015a. Sediment Texture and Grain Size Distribution. Section 3, in: Seafloor Mapping of Long Island Sound - Final Report: Phase 1 Pilot Project. (Unpublished project report). U. S. Environmental Protection Agency Long Island Sound Study, Stamford, CT. http://longislandsoundstudy.net/wp-

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content/uploads/2010/02/LISCF_PilotMappingProject_Report_Final_June2015-reduced-file- size.pdf

2. Nitsche, F.O., Kenna, T., McHugh, C.M. 2015b. Sedimentary Environment. Section 4, in: Seafloor Mapping of Long Island Sound - Final Report: Phase 1 Pilot Project. (Unpublished project report). U. S. Environmental Protection Agency Long Island Sound Study, Stamford, CT. http://longislandsoundstudy.net/wp- content/uploads/2010/02/LISCF_PilotMappingProject_Report_Final_June2015-reduced-file- size.pdf

3. Bell, R. E., Flood, R. D., Carbotte, S.M., Ryan, W.B.F., McHugh, C., Cormier, M., Versteeg, R., Chayes, D., Bokuniewicz, Ferrini, V., and Thissen, J., 2000. Hudson River Estuary Program Benthic Mapping Project, NYS Dept. of Env. Conservation Final Report, April 28, 2000. Lamont-Doherty Earth Obs. Columbia Univ., Marine Science Res. Ctr. SUNY, Stony Brook, Queens College, CUNY 238 p.

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EXTERNAL FUNDING HISTORY ONLY ~$2,000,000 (PAST 15 YEARS)

Period Supporting Project Title Award Covered Agency Amount Award

USSSP PARTICIPATION IN IODP $60,000 PENDING NSF OCE-1450528 EXPEDITION 386: SUBMARINE PENDING PALEOSESIMOLOGY IN THE JAPAN TRENCH

NSF 1919910 MRI ACQUISITION OF A $557,699 08/09/19 OCE-MAJOR VERSATILE, INTEGRATIVE AUV (ALMOST INSTRUMENTATI SYSTEM FUNDED ON COPI C MCHUGH WILL RESUBMIT) THE LONG ISLAND SOUND LONG ISLAND SOUND $154,434 08.01/17- CABLE FUND MAPPING PHASE II PART OF A 12/31/19 STEERING $1.5 M COMMITTEE GRANT ARIDITY AND MONSOON USSSP CLIMATIC PATTERNS FOR THE $15,000 08/015- NSF OCE-1450528 NEOGENE AND QUATERNARY, 02/28/19 NW AUSTRALIA PI C. MCHUGH

USSSP IODP EXPEDITION 356 $75,820 08/01/15- NSF OCE-1450528 INDONESIAN THROUGHFLOW 02/28/19 PI C. MCHUGH

PRIME AWARD ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS AND VANDERBILT U. HUMAN MIGRATION IN A LOW- $233,716 08/15/2012- VU22539-S1 LYING DEVELOPING NATION: A PART OF A 09/30/2017 SUBAWARD COMPARISON OF CO-EVOLVING $7M GRANT COLUMBIA U. NATURAL AND HUMAN SUBAWARD LANDSCAPES IN THE QUEENS PHYSICALLY AND CULTURALLY COLLEGE DIVERSE CONTEXT OF BANGLADESH PI C. MCHUGH NSF-PIRE OISE 09-68354 PIRE: LIFE ON TECTONICALLY $188,393 9/1/10- PRIME AWARD ACIVE DELTA-CONVERGENCE PART OF A 8/31/16 LAMONT- OF EARTH-SCIENCE AND $5M GRANT DOHERTY EARTH GEOHAZARD RESEARCH IN OBSERVATORY BANGLADESH WITH SUBAWARD EDUCATION AND CAPACITY QUEENS BUILDING. COLLEGE PI C. MCHUGH

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COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH: NSF-MG&G SEDIMENT PATHWAYS, $119,005 8/1/14- OCE-1436240 SEDIMENTATION PROCESSES, 7/31/17 AND STRUCTURAL GROWTH ALONG THE TOHOKU SEGMENT OF THE JAPAN SUBDUCTION MARGIN: ROLE OF MEGATHRUST EARTHQUAKES PI C. MCHUGH COPI L. SEEBER COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH: NSF- THE NORTH ANATOLIAN FAULT $68,855 02/15/13- OCE 12-34428 SYSTEM IN THE MARMARA SEA, 02/14/15 TURKEY-INSIGHTS FROM THE QUATERNARY EVOLUTION OF A MULTI-STRANDED TRANSFROM PI M. STECKLER, D. SHILLINGTON, C. GONZALEZ- MCHUGH, L. SEEBER

THE LONG ISLAND SOUND THE LONG ISLAND SOUND $66,913 05/01/12- CABLE FUND MAPPING – PHASE I – PILOT 09/31/14 STEERING STUDY COMMITTEE- PI C. MCHUGH PRIME AWARD LAMONT- DOHERTY EARTH OBSERVATORY SUBAWARD QUEENS COLLEGE

COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH: NSF – RAPID GRANT: INVESTIGATIONS 01/15/13 OCE 13-22784 OF THE IMPACT OF $22,415 01/14/15 SUPERSTORM SANDY ON THE SOUTH SHORE OF LONG ISALAND PI CECILIA MCHUGH INTERNATION SUBMARINE AL OCEAN PALEOSEISMOLOGY: USING $25,000 07/16/2015 DISCOVERY GIANT PISTON CORING WITHIN 07/18/2015 PROGRAM IODP TO FILL THE GAP IN LONG- WORKSHOP - TERM RECORDS OF GREAT US SCIENCE EARTHQUAKES SUPPORT JULY 16-18 2015 PROGRAM ETH ZURICH, SWITZERLAND PI CECILIA MCHUGH

NSF RAPID COLLABORATIVE OCE 11-39036 RESEARCH: OFFSHORE IMPACTS $87,116 6/01/11-05/31/13 OF THE TOHOKU-OKI EARTHQUAKE ON SEAFLOOR DEFORMATION,

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SEDIMENTATION, EROSION, SUNAMIGENSIS PI C. MCHUGH AND L. SEEBER

RAPID COLLABORATIVE NSF – MG&G RESEARCH: OFF-SHORE $158,053 2/01/10-02/28/11 RAPID COSESIMIC EFFECTS OF THE OCE-1028045 PORT AU PRINCE EARTHQUAKE HAITI PI C. MCHUGH, CO PI’S M. STECKER, M.-H. CORMIER, J. DIEBOLD, L. SEEBER

INTEGRATED CONTINENTAL TRANSFORM $25,000 2/1/11 – 7/1/11 OCEAN DRILLING BOUNDARIES: TECTONIC PROGRAM EVOLUTION AND GEOHAZARDS FUNDING FOR PI C. MCHUGH WORKSHOP IN ISTANBUL, TURKEY RAPID COLLABORATIVE NSF – MG&G RESEARCH: OFF-SHORE $11,801 6/15/10-02/28/11 RAPID COSESIMIC EFFECTS OF THE SUPPLEMENT PORT AU PRINCE EARTHQUAKE OCE-1028045 HAITI PI C. MCHUGH, CO PI’S M. STECKER, M.-H. CORMIER, J. DIEBOLD, L. SEEBER U.S. SCIENCE SEDIMENTATION PROCESSES SUPPORT DURING SEQUENCE AND $15,000 5/15/10-4/14/11 PROGRAM SEQUENCE BOUNDARY JOI DIVISION DEVELOPMENT: CANTERBURY BASIN, NEW ZEALAND

U.S. SCIENCE PARTICIPATION IN IODP $59,251 11/1/09-2/01/10 SUPPORT EXPEDITION 317: CANTERBURY PROGRAM BASIN, NEW ZEALAND JOI DIVISION HOLOCENE EARTHQUAKE SUPPLEMENT TO RUPTURESALONG THE NORTH $24,726 7//1/09-9/30/10 NSF-OCE 03-28119 ANATOLIA FAULT IN THE SUBAWARD MARMARA SEA, TURKEY: AGE, QUEENS SPATIAL EXTENT AND COLLEGE SEDIMENTARY PROCESSES P.I. C. MCHUGH EXXON-MOBIL WHERE AND WHEN WERE THE $7,763 9/30/09-9/29/10 UTIG “JOKULHAUP” SEDIMENTS SUBAWARD DEPOSITED ON THE NEW QUEENS JERSEY SHELF? COLLEGE

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COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH NSF-OEDG TRACK 1: PARTNERSHIP TO $100,000 5/1/2005 GEO 05-03553 ENHANCE DIVERSITY IN 4/30/2007 MARINE GEOSCIENCES: HOLOCENE CLIMATE AND ANTHROPOGENIC CHANGES FROM LONG ISLAND SOUND, NY PI MCHUGH, COPI’S P. MARCHESE, Y. ZHENG, K. KOHFELD, M.-H. CORMIER

TRACKING THE PATH OF ENTERGY CORP. CONTAMINANTS ON THE EAST $25,000 5/01/08-04/30/11 RIVER SECTION OF LONG ISLAND SOUND MCHUGH, C. PI

NRG ENERGY LONG ISLAND SOUND IMPACT $10,000 6/01/06- ASSESSMENT 5/31/11 MCHUGH, C. PI

COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH NSF SUBMARINE EARTHQUAKE $65,500 06/01/02 OCE 02-22139 GEOLOGY IN THE MARMARA 05/30/05 SEISMIC GAP. MCHUGH, C. P.I.

NYS SCI-TECH LONG ISLAND SOUND IMPACT 17,500 6/01/06- CUNY ASSESSMENT 5/31/11

NEW TOOLS APPLIED TO A NSF CLASSIC PROBLEM: TOWARDS $317,204 1/1/02 – 04/30/05 OCE 01-19019 AN UNDERSTANDING OF WHAT SHAPES THE STRATIGRAPHIC RECORD AT PASSIVE MARGINS – CO-PI’S MOUNTAIN, G., CHRISTIE-BLICK, N., MCHUGH, C., PEKAR, S. ASSESSING THE NATURAL HUDSON RIVER HAZARD FOR THE LOWER $144,328 06/01/01- FOUNDATION HUDSON RIVER REGION BY 04/30/05 75276-00-01 ESTIMATING CLIMATE VARIABILITY FOR THE PAST 6,000 YEARS –PI MCHUGH, C., CO-PI’S PEKAR, S., BURCKLE. L.

International Collaborative Proposals (scheduled for June-August 2020)

International Ocean Discovery Program: On schedule as IODP 368 for summer 2020: TRACKing past earthquakes in the sediment record along the Japan Trench: Testing and developing submarine Paleoseismology in the deep sea (JTRACK-Paleoseismology).

Lead Proponents: Michael Strasser, University of Innsbruck, Austria. Other Lead Proponents: Ken Ikehara, Geological Survey of Japan, Toshiya Kanamatsu, JAMSTEC, Japan, Shuichi

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Kodaira, JAMSTEC, Japan, Cecilia McHugh, Queens College, CUNY, USA, Yasuyuki Nakamura, (Data Lead) JAMSTEC, Japan.

Other Proponents: Antonio Cattaneo, IFREMER, France, Timothy Eglinton, ETH, Zurich, Switzerland, Chris Goldfinger, Oregon State University, USA, Takuya Itaki, Geological Survey of Japan, Arata Kioka, University of Innsbruck, Austria, Achim Kopf, MARUM, Bremen, Germany, Jasper Moernaut, University of Innsbruck, Austria, Jim Mori, Kyoto University, Japan, Yoshitaka Nagahashi, Fukushima University, Japan, Volkhard Spiess, University of Bremen, Germany, Witold Szczuciski, Adam Micklewicz University, Poland, Mike Underwood, New Mexico Tech, USA, Kazuko Usami, Geological Survey of Japan, Stefan Wiemer, ETH, Zurich, Switzerland. https://www.iodp.org/proposal-cover-sheets?limit=20&limitstart=60

International Collaborative Proposals Pending 2018

International Ocean Discovery Program: Impact of Petit Spot Magmatism on Subduction Zone Seismicity and the Global Geochemical Cycle. IODP-939APL

Proponents: Asuka Yamaguchi, Gou Fujie, Naoto Hirano, Takanori Kagoshima, Norikatsu Akizawa, Jun-Ichi Kimura, Yasuyuki Nakamura, Cecilia McHugh, Jason Morgan, Tomoaki Morishita, Shigeaki Ono, Sebastien Pilet, Susanne Straub, Tomohiro Toki, Yama Tomonaga, Greg Valentine, Makoto Yamano. In review by the IODP Science Evaluation Panel (submitted April 1, 2019). https://www.iodp.org/proposals/active-proposals

2019-2020 Marine National Facility Granted Voyage: Application No. 2019-20-05: Neotectonics of the Northern Carnarvon Basin: a Quaternary history of seismicity, slope failure and submarine slides. Chief Scientist: A/Prof Stephen Gallagher, University of Melbourne. Alternate Chief Scientist: Myra Keep, University of WA. Co-Pi’s Sebastian Krastal, University of Kiel, Katja Lindhorst, University of Kiel, Margaret Boettcher, University of New Hampshire, Cecilia McHugh, Queens University of CUNY, USA, Ingrid Ward, University of WA, Julien Bourget, University of WA, Briony Mamo, University of Hong Kong, Ingo Pecher, University of Auckland, Jerry Dickens, Rice University, USA, Peter Baillie, University of WA (Adjunct), Mariem Saavedra-Pellitero, MARUM, Bremen

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STUDENTS MENTORED a. Graduate Students:

Main advisor: 1. *2017 (in progress) Robert Schenck (PhD). Paleoseismology along the IndoBurma ranges, Bangladesh. Queens College, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. 2. 2016 (in progress) Linda McCain Moore (MA). Seismites of the Japan Trench Margin. Queens College, City University of New York. 3. *2015-2018: Sharif Mustaque (MA) Quaternary fluvial and tectonic evolution along the IndoBurma ranges using sediments and geochemical proxies as provenance. COMPLETED. Queens College, City University of New York 4. *2013-2018: Dhiman Mondal (PhD) Evidence of the 1762 Arakan and prior earthquakes in the Northern Sunda Subduction, pp 160. COMPLETED. Queens College, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. 5. *2013-2017: Pariskeh Hosseini (PhD). The sedimentation record of storms offshore Long Island and Long Island Sound. Queens College, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. 6. *2014-2017: Edwige Lauture (MA) Tracking the path of contaminants in Western and Central Long Island Sound. pp 202 COMPLETED. Queens College, City University of New York 7. *2012-2014: Amanda Bastas-Hernandez (MA) Sedimentary record of paleodeformation: tectonics, sea level and sedimentation: SE Bangladesh, pp115. COMPLETED. Queens College, City University of New York 8. 2009 to 2011: Kathryn Mishkin (PhD) Global and local control in the evolution of a continental margin: Canterbury Basin, New Zealand. Queens College, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. 9. *2003 to 2012 – Damayanti Gurung (Ph.D.) Late Pleistocene-Holocene climate change inferred from fossil fauna in the Marmara Sea, Turkey and the Hudson River Estuary, NY. COMPLETED. Queens College, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. 10. *2005 to 2012– Elana Klein (Ph.D.) Coastal Processes and Anthropogenic Impact: Raritan - Sandy Hook Bay, New Jersey. COMPLETED 11. 2006 to 2012– Adina Hakimian (MA) Submarine Paleoseismology in the Ionian Sea, Mediterrranean. COMPLETED. Queens College, The City University of New York. 12. *2002 to 2008. George Lozefski. Submarine Paleoseismology in the Gulf of Izmit, Turkey. 13. 1999 to 2008- Robert Appelbaum (Ph.D.) Eocene climate and sea-level derived from sediment and Formation Micro Scanner (FMS) data on the New Jersey Continental Margin. COMPLETED. Queens College and The Graduate Center of the City University of New York

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14. *2004-2007. Alessandro Soricheta. Research Scholar. Crustal unloading along a continental transform: flexural response to the North Anatolian Fault in Izmit Gulf, NW Turkey COMPLETED. Queens College, The City University of New York. 15. *2002-2004. Jessica Dutton (MA). Developing tools for Submarine Earthquake Geology in Turkey and Northern Venezuela. COMPLETED. Queens College, The City University of New York. 16. 1998-2000 Basil Skordas (MA) The impact of toxic waste dumping on the submarine environment. Queens College, The City University of New York.

*Related publications under Journals and Abstracts sections. b. Committee Member: (International $$ - National $)

1. $$ 2019 July 1 Chloe Seibert (PhD) Offshore Paleoseismology in the Lesser Antilles Arc, Instutue du Globe du Paris, France 2. $$*2016 (in progress) Tobias Schwestermann (PhD) Japan Trench turbidites provenance. University of Innsbruck, Austria 3. $*2019 (Defended successfully February 22 2019) Vanshan Wright (PhD) Neotectonics of the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden transform boundary in Jamaica. Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX 4. $$2014 to 2018 Julia Kende (PhD) Sedimentary records of hydrology and fault slip in the Marmara Sea Basins, Turkey. CEREGE, Aix-Marseille Université, France 5. 2013 to 2018 (in progress): Ben Kwiatkowski (PhD). The evolution of the Late Miocene constriction of deep water circulation through the Central American Seaway, its impact on global ocean circulation and the beginning of modern climate. The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. 6. 2009 to 2015: Daniel W. Hauptvogel (PhD) The state of the Oligocene Icehouse World: Sedimentology, provenance and stable isotopes of marine sediments from the Antarctic Continental Margin. COMPLETED. The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. 7. 2002 to 2008– Noureddin Amaach (Ph.D.) Sediments and pollution in the New York Bight, NY. COMPLETED. The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. 8. 2000 to 2006- Farnosh Saadi (Ph.D.). Dinoflagellate Stratigraphy and Facies of the Late Cretaceous – Early Tertiary (K/T boundary) interval at the Bass River Site, New Jersey, ODP 174X. COMPLETED. The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. 9. 2005 to 2007. Donald Clark (Ph.D.) COMPLETED. The Graduate Center of the City University of New York 10. 2001 to 2003- Peter Fleischer (Ph.D.). Glaciological Roots of New York City's Regional Geography: A GIS Visualization. The Graduate Center of the City University of New York 11. *2000 - 2002. JoAnn Thiessen (MA) Hudson River Estuary Benthic Mapping and Sediment Analyses. COMPLETED. SUNY Stony Brook. 12. 1998 to 2000- Fatemeh Sayrafiezadeh (Ph.D.) Sediment contamination in the Lower Hudson Estuary. COMPLETED The Graduate Center of the City University of New York

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13. 1998 to 2007 - Paul Feinberg (Ph.D.) Ecology of the Hudson River Estuary. COMPLETED The Graduate Center of the City University of New York 14. 1997 to 2005 - Paula Gural (MA) Tectonics and sedimentation of the Hudson Valley region. COMPLETED. Queens College and The City University of New York 15. 1998 to 1999 - Tarik Zarrouk (Ph.D.). The chemical characteristics of the interstitial waters in sediments of Great South Bay. COMPLETED The Graduate Center of the City University of New York

*Related publications under Journals and Abstracts sections. c. Undergraduate Students:

Main advisor:

1. 2019 – Nickolas Dubin Long Island Sound Sedimentation Processes-Chronology 2. 2019- Shaneeza Aziz Paleoclimate in the Eastern Mediterranean 3. 2018-2019 Jessica Bong Macaulay Honors SE Indian Ocean paleoclimate 4. 2017-2018 Adam Kaiser Long Island Sound Mapping Project 5. 2016-2017 Prasala Tuladhar and Jaswinder Karr Sediment and Tectonics Bangladesh 6. *2015-2018 Michael Delligatti Long Island Sound Sedimentation Processes 7. *2015-2017 Jennifer Castaneda SE Indian Ocean Quaternary paleoclimate 8. *2014-2016 Victoria Mansfield Sedimentation triggered by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, Japan Trench 9. *2013-2015 Elisa Oliveira Sedimentation triggered by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, Japan Trench 10. *2008-2010 Andrea Balbas. Heavy metal concentrations in the sediments of Long Island Sound. 11. 2008-2010. Myrna Gattica. Seismoturbidites of the Marmara Sea. 12. *2008-2010 Nicole Braudy. Seismoturbidites of the Marmara Sea. 13. 2008-2010 Carolyn Aquino Seismoturbidites of the Canal du Sud. Haiti 14. *2007-2008. Jennifer Rios. Benthic foraminifers of Long Island Sound. 15. *2005-2008. Vadim Acosta. Benthic foraminifers of Long Island Sound. 16. *2005-2009. Alexandrea Bowman. Mercury concentrations in the Long Island Sound sediments. 17. *2002-2006 Corinne Hartin. Drainage systems associated with the latest Pleistocene-Holocene paleoshoreline on the New York – New Jersey Continental Margin 18. *2002-2004. Helene Gould. Evidence for the latest Pleistocene-Holocene shoreline along the New York-New Jersey Continental Margin 19. *2002-2004. Sarah Brownlee. Diatoms as proxies for climate change in the Hudson River, New York 20. *2001-2003. George Losefzky Paleoseismology in the Marmara Sea seismic gap. 21. *2001-2002 Miriam Jones. Decadal to Millennial Sedimentation Patterns of Hudson River Estuary. 22. *1999 - 2001. Gillian Pereira. Late Holocene paleoclimate of the Hudson Valley revealed by the diatom assemblages.

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23. 1998. Joel Jackel. High Resolution Climate Study of Pleistocene Sediment, New Jersey Continental Margin. Sigma-Xi presentation at Queens College. 24. 1998. Mary Ann Possini. High Resolution Climate Study of Pleistocene Sediment, New Jersey Continental Margin. 25. 1998. Onika Shing. Diatom distribution in the Hudson River Estuary. 26. 1998. Christin Garritano. Hudson River Benthic Mapping and Sediment Sampling. Participated in the sampling field program of the Hudson River from the R/V Walford. 27. 1998. Taso Lamputis. Hudson River Benthic Mapping and Sediment Sampling. Participated in the sampling field program of the Hudson River from the R/V Walford. 28. *1997. Bettina Ben-Eliezer. Isotope Calibration of Pleistocene Sequences, New Jersey Continental Margin. Sigma-Xi presentation at Queens College and was part of the abstract presented in San Antonio, TX. at an AAPG national meeting. 29. 1996. Carol Fitzgerald. High Resolution Climate Study of Pleistocene Sediment, New Jersey Continental Margin. 30. 1996. Veronika Forero. The role of mass-wasting on the evolution of the New Jersey Continental Margin. Sigma-Xi presentation at Queens College 31. 1995. Thomas Lyogis. Upper Eocene tektites of the North American Strewn Field. 32. 1994. John Walsh. Mass-wasting facies of the New Jersey Continental Margin.

*Related publications under Journals and Abstracts sections. d. Mentoring of High-School Students for Intel Competitions:

2002 Kaliopi Zangos. Earthquakes along the North Anatolia Fault in the Marmara Sea Turkey Intel Semi-Finalist 2001. Dave Fong, Testing the feasibility of paleoseismology in the Marmara Sea seismic gap. 2000. Salma Ragoonath, Relation between tributary discharge, tides, and mineral distribution along the Hudson River from the sedimentary record and side-scan sonar imagery. 1999. Kristi Van Olen, Relation between grain size and side-scan sonar backscatter: Examples from the Hudson River. Kristi formed part of the results presented at a Hudson River workshop.

1998. Michael Bregger, High Resolution Climatic Variability of Pleistocene Sediment, New Jersey Continental Margin. Michael formed part of the results presented at a San Antonio, TX. National AAPG meeting.

1997. Tara Patterson, Possible Chesapeake Bay Impact Crater ejecta in upper Eocene sediment: New Jersey Coastal Plain. Westinghouse Semi-Finalist Brooklyn Polytechnique Finalist Dallas International Meeting Participant

SERVICE

a. PROFESSION

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1. International Ocean Discovery Program Early Career Mentoring Workshop. February 2020. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University. Invited as 1 of 4 mentors of 40 early career scientists.

2. International Ocean Discovery Program Workshop NEXT: Scientific Ocean Drilling Beyond 2023. One of 70 US scientists to attend this workshop in which we defined the science program of Ocean Drilling beyond 2023 (invited)

3. International Ocean Discovery Program meeting in Vienna Austria April 2019. In this meeting attended by Japanese and European scientist and IODP Platform representatives, we defined the logisitics for IODP Expedition 389: Paleoseismology in the Japan Trench. Only US representative CoPi and woman participant. (Invited by IODP)

4. Distinguished Lecturer, International Ocean Discovery Program, United States Science Support Program. 2017-2018

5. “IODP Proposal Nurturing Workshop: Goa, India 17-18 September, 2018”. Understanding the nature and structure of the shallow portion of a subduction zone: IODP Drilling of the IndoBurma Subduction Zone by C. McHugh. (Invited) Trip supported by IODP, one of five US participants

6. Shepard Medal Award for Marine Geology, Committee Member, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists. Two-year term (2018-2020).

7. “Eastern Mediterranean and Marmara Sea workshop for IODP proposal writing” Lisbon, Portugal, February 21-23, 2018. (Invited). Trip supported by IODP

8. “Assessment of the R/V JOIDES Resolution in Meting the Challenges of the IODP Science Plan”, Denver, CO, September 24-26, 2017 (Invited, IODP)

9. “Proposal 866 Full2: TRACKing past earthquakes in the sediment record along the Japan Trench: Testing and developing submarine Paleoseismology in the deep sea (JTRACK-Paleoseismology)” Workshop for developing IODP Proposal, Yokohama Japan. (Trip supported by IODP).

10. “Land-Sea Interaction Across the Indian Ocean: Workshop. Narragansettt, Rhode Island, USA, July 12-14, 2017 (Invited, IODP)

11. International Ocean Discovery Program Science Evaluation Panelist, 9/1/14-8/31/17

12. For 2017: External Evaluator for promotion from Associate to Full Professor: Department of Geology and Geophysics, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA and Departments of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of North Carolina, Wilmington, USA

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13. Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Science Steering and Evaluation Panelist, 9/1/09– 8/31/12

14. IODP Workshop for “Submarine Paleosesimology” Zurich, July 2015. Co-organizer with Michael Strasser (ETH, Zurich), Antonio Cattaneo (IFREMER) and Ken Ikehara (AIST). Trip supported by IODP.

15. Queens College Division of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Undergraduate Research Conference. Main Coordinator. 2004-2011. 16. IODP Workshop in Istanbul Technical University, for preparation of a drilling proposal in Marmara Sea, 2011. Leader and main organizer together with P. Henry (France) and N. Cagatay (Turkey).

17. Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans Annual Meeting 2007, Invited Panelist

18. State Univ. of N.Y. Maritime Academy, 2007-2013, Science Advisory Comm.

19. American Assoc. of Petroleum Geologists, 1996-1999, Chair Academic Liaison

20. NSF-MG&G, GeoPrism proposal reviewer for 2017

21. NSF proposal reviewer (2000-2019)

22. Journal reviewer for 2017-2019: Geology, Marine Geology, Tectonophysics, Journal of Geophysical Research (Solid Earth), Nature Geoscience, G3 Geophysics, Geochemistry and Geoscience .

23. Journal reviewer (1993-2019)

b. COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY

Queens College School of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Surficial Geology, Chair of Search Committee 2019-2020

Structural Geology Search Committee 2017 - 2018

Personnel and Budget 1996-2016, Spring 2018

Chair Search Committee 2012 - 2013 Structural Geology

Chair Search Committee 2012 – 2013 Environmental Remediation

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Division of Math and Natural Sciences Assistant Dean 2003-2011

Div. of Math &Natural Sciences Deans Search Committee 2008

Graduate Advisor 1998-2002

Internship Coordinator 1996-2005

Seminar Coordinator 1997 & 2017

The Graduate Center of the City University of New York

Bridges to the Doctorate Selection Committee 2005

PSC-CUNY Panelist 2005-2009

Louis Stoke Alliance for 2003-2010 Minority Participation Steering Committee

Curriculum Committee 1994

Ph.D. Exam Committee 1994

Executive Committee 1993-1999 & 2013-2018

c. MEDIA COVERAGE

2017 MEXICO EARTHQUAKE

Telemundo Interviews about 2017 Mexico earthquake http://www.telemundo47.com/noticias/local/Desastres-naturales-seguir_n-ocurriendo_TLMD-- -Nueva-York-446218513.html

2013 SUPER STORM SANDY Long Island Nassau, NY interview

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https://www.newsday.com/long-island/nassau/radioactive-element-found-in-reynolds-channel- 1.7069063

2010 HAITI White House Home Page Article by Dr. Kate Moran http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/ostp Haiti Project Home Page: http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/research/marine-geology-geophysics/haiti-offshore-a-rapid- response-expedition

There were press releases:

At Queens College 4/1/10. “White House Web Site Applauds QC Scientist’s Efforts in Haiti. http://www.qc.cuny.edu/Pages/default.aspx

At Queens College Magazine “Deep Readings” Spring-Fall 2010 http://digital.qc.cuny.edu/h/i/29709-queens-magazine-summer-fall-2010

At the University of Rhode Island on February 17, 2010 where Todd Mcleish is the media contact: “URI research vessel Endeavor to travel to Haiti for scientific investigation, humanitarian mission”. http://www.uri.edu/news/releases/?id=5220

At Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory entitled “Scientists Sail to Assess Haiti Quake Threat” by Kevin Kraijak on February 22, 2010. http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/news-events/scientists-set-sail-assess-haiti-quake-threat

At the University of Texas at Austin Jackson School of Geosciences on February 23, 2010 http://www.jsg.utexas.edu/news/rels/022310.html

At NSF: Rapid Response Science Missions Assess for Another Major Haiti Earthquake 2/24/10 http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=116543&org=NSF&from=news

Interviews: C. McHugh by Anna Gustafson from the Times Ledger on 3/30/10 C. McHugh by Donna Shoemaker on 4/2/10 for publication on Queens College Newsletter and Alumni Magazine Cecilia McHugh by Amanda Buckiewicz of the Discovery Channel, Canada on February 22, 2010. Film can be seen at http://watch.discoverychannel.ca/daily-planet/february-2010/daily-planet---february-23- 2010/#clip269605

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Sean Gulick and Paul Mann by Richard Harris from NPR. The interview was aired March 6 to March 8, 2010 in the “All Things Considered Weekend Edition” about the Haiti rapid response projects. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=124655789

Leonardo Seeber and Cecilia McHugh were in live communication from the R/V Endeavor with the Lamont Advisory Board Meeting on Wednesday March 10, 2010 where they reported about their findings of the offshore trace of the Enriquillo fault with the assistance of Michael Steckler.

Sean Gulick and Paul Mann by Discovery in US http://dsc.discovery.com/tv-schedules/special.html?paid=1.14951.26206.0.0

The program also appeared in Pioneer TV in UK http://uk-tv-guide.com/pick-of-the-day/2-February-2010/documentary-haitis-killer-quake-why- it-happened/

Blogs:

Queens College, CUNY Ph.D. student Katie Mishkin maintained a daily blog of the expedition at: http://www.amishkin.com Katie should be especially commended for her efforts!

Excerpts of the expedition were posted daily by Kevin Krajick on the Columbia University State of the Planet blog: http://blogs.ei.columbia.edu/blog/tag/haiti-earthquake/

2010 CANTERUBURY BASIN Scientist Drill Deepest Hole Off New Zealand http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/news-events/scientists-drill-deepest-hole-new-zealand

2009 MARMARA SEA

The City University of New York – Video Series “Shaking Things Up” http://www1.cuny.edu/portal_ur/flv/cunyod/cunyod.html

2006 LONG ISLAND SOUND Long Island Sound Expedition from the R/V Hugh Sharp Video: Students Explore the Long Island sound by Rich Billay

Articles: Students Study Long Island Sound: The King News, 9/14/06 by Alexandrea Bowman Future Queens Scientists Cruise LI Sound: TimesLedger.com, 7/6/06 by Scott Sieber

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On Open Water: Minority Students Explore Sound’s Depths. Queens Tribune, 6/30/06 by Ellen Thompson The Lure of the Sea and Science for Minority Students. New York Times, 6/30/06 by April Simpson R/V Hugh R. Sharp Studies Long Island Sound. Long Island Boating World, 6/06 by Terry Conway. Minority Students Will Survey Long Island Sound. FYI: Queens College Faculty and Staff News, 5/06 Web Page: http://www.explore-the-sound.org

2008 Tsunami in New York?

The New York Times Metro Section. December 30, 2008 http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/30/nyregion/30tsunami.html?_r=1

1998 Ocean Drilling Program Publicity during Leg 174A

Filmed by: British Broadcasting Company for a T.V. series on "Climate" C.N.N. for Latin America (in Spanish) for an Oceanography program. Photographed for the "Miami Herald" for a scientific article to be published summer of 1998. Conducted V.I.P. tours of the R/V Joides Resolution while in New York Harbor. July 19-20.

d. INVITED ABSTRACTS AND WORKSHOPS (up to 2007)

McHugh, C. 2007. Developing Tools for Submarine Earthquake Geology: Examples from the Marmara Sea, Turkey. University of Missouri at Columbia. October 11, 2007

McHugh, C. 2007. Partnership to Enhance Diversity in Marine Geosciences. In: Enhancing Community College Pathways to Careers in STEM Disciplines. SACNAS National Conference in Kansas City MO, October 11, 2007.

McHugh, C. 2007. Late Pleistocene to Holocene climate and anthropogenic impact in western Long Island Sound, preliminary results. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Marine Geology and Geophysical Seminar. October 31, 2007.

McHugh, C. M. 2007. Reconnections of Marginal Basins to the World Ocean: New Data from the Marmara Sea. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Marine Geology and Geophysical Seminar. May 30, 2007.

McHugh, C. M. 2007. Partnership to Enhance Diversity in the Marine Geosciences: Holocene Climate and Anthropogenic Changes from Long Island Sound, NY. Alliance for Minority Participation Urban Conference. City College, CUNY April 27, 2007.

51

McHugh, C. M. 2007. Conditions Near Flushing Bay. Flushing Watershed Workshop, Queens College, CUNY, March 29, 2007.

McHugh, C. M. 2007. Developing Tools for Submarine Earthquake Geology Along the North Anatolia Fault Zone in the Marmara Sea, Turkey. Adelphi University. February 20, 2007.

Sorichetta A., Seeber L., McHugh C. M. G., Cormier M.-H., Taramelli A., 2006. Crustal unloading along a continental transform: flexural response to the North Anatolian Fault in Izmit Gulf, NW Turkey, International Workshop on Comparative Studies of the North Anatolian Fault (Northwest Turkey) and the San Andreas Fault (Southern California), Istanbul Technical University. Istanbul, August 14-18, 2006.

McHugh, C. M. Seeber, L., Cormier, M.-H., Dutton, J., Cagatay, N., Polonia, A. 20007. Submarine earthquake geology along the North Anatolia Fault in the Marmara Sea, Turkey: What we learnt about transform basins, earthquakes, and sedimentation. NSF-Sponsored International Workshop on Comparative Studies of the North Anatolian Fault (Northwestern Turkey) and the San Andreas Fault (Southern California). Istanbul Technical University. August 14-18, 2006.

Cormier, M.-H., Seeber, L., McHugh, C., Chadwell, D., Webb, S. 2007. Strategies for Characterizing Seafloor Deformation Along the Submarine Extensions of Continental Margins. NSF-Sponsored International Workshop on Comparative Studies of the North Anatolian Fault (Northwestern Turkey) and the San Andreas Fault (Southern California). Istanbul Technical University. August 14-18, 2006.

M.-H. Cormier, C. McHugh, L. Seeber, 2006. Tectonics, earthquakes, and sedimentation in transform basins: an integrated approach for the Caribbean plate boundaries. Tectonics, Circulation and Climate in the Caribbean Gateway Workshop. JOI/USSSP Sponsored IODP Workshop. March 30-April 1, 2006.

McHugh, C. M. 2005. Late Pleistocene to Holocene lacustrine to marine transition in the Marmara Sea: Implications for climate and paleoseismic interpretations. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Marine Geology and Geophysical Seminar. April 27, 2005.

McHugh, C.M, 2005. Late Holocene spatial variability in the sedimentation patterns of the Hudson River Estuary and its implications for obtaining long-term climatic records. Hudson River Foundation, Seminar Series NYC. March 1, 2005.

McHugh, C.M. 2005. Late Holocene spatial variability in the sedimentation patterns of the Hudson River Estuary and its implications for obtaining long-term climatic records. Hunter College Seminar Series NYC. Spring 2005.

McHugh, C.M. 2005. Late Holocene spatial variability in the sedimentation patterns of the Hudson River Estuary and its implications for obtaining long-term climatic records. Governors Island Seminar Series at The Graduate Center. Spring 2005.

52

McHugh, C. M. 2005. Offshore Evidence of Laurentide Deglaciation. In: Timing and Pattern of Eastern Laurentide Deglaciation Workshop. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University. November 18, 2005.

McHugh, C. M. 2004. Submarine Earthquake Geology Along the North Anatolia Fault, Marmara Sea, Turkey. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Marine Geology and Geophysical Seminar. March 31, 2004.

McHugh, C. 2003. Spatial variability in sediment deposition, erosion and bypass in the fresh and oligohaline parts of the Hudson River Estuary. Hudson River Foundation Sediment Transport Workshop. November 20, 2003.

McHugh, C. M. 2003. Continental Margins. Istanbul Technical University. April 23, 2003.

McHugh, C. M. 2003. Earthquake Geology along the North Anatolia Fault Zone in the Marmara Sea. Istanbul Technical University. April 20, 2003.

McHugh, C. M. 2002. Rapid Infilling of the Hudson River Estuary in the latest Holocene: Implications for Continental Margin Sedimentation. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Marine Geology and Geophysical Seminar. November 24, 2002.

McHugh, C.M. 2000. Evaluating Estuarine Habitat in the NY/NJ Harbor. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, N.Y., N.Y. October 24-25, 2000.

McHugh, C. M. G., 1997. Mass transport deposits of the New Jersey continental margin and their correlation to slope morphology and sequence boundaries. Geology Department, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware.

McHugh, C. M. G., Damuth, J. E., Mountain, G. S. and Leg 150 Shipboard Scientific Party, 1994, Mass-wasting and turbidite facies on the New Jersey continental slope and rise: Initial results from ODP, Leg 150, Turbidite and Deep Water Sedimentation Research Group, Denver, Colorado, June 13, 1994.

Mountain, G. S., Damuth, J. E., McHugh, C. M. G., and ODP Leg 150 Shipboard Scientific Party, 1994, Testing the relationship of Oligocene to Recent unconformities, sequence boundaries, and sediment deposition to global sea-level cycles: Results of the New Jersey sea-level transect, ODP Leg 150, Sequence Stratigraphy Research Group, Denver, Colorado, June 13, 1994.

McHugh, C. M., 1992, Sedimentary processes associated with channel overflow: examples from the Monterey Fan, Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory-Marine Geology and Geophysics Seminar, Palisades, N.Y., September 30, 1992.

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McHugh, C. M., 1991, Medium fans: Monterey fan, geometry, bedforms, fluid migration, and evolution, Lamont-Doherty Industrial Associates Meeting, "Deep-Sea Fan Systems", Palisades, N. Y., April 18-19.

McHugh, C. M., and Ryan, W. B. F., 1991, Small sized fans: Ebro and Rhone fans, geometry, bedforms, and evolution, Lamont-Doherty Industrial Associates Meeting, "Deep-Sea Fan Systems", Palisades, N. Y., April 18-19.

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Board of Trustees of The City University of New York

RESOLUTION TO Award Sofya Aptekar with Early Tenure at The City University of New York School of Labor and Urban Studies with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2)

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, Dr. Sofya Aptekar was appointed as Associate Professor in the School of Labor and Urban (“SLU”) Urban Studies Department on September 1, 2020 and a condition of her appointment included a commitment by SLU to consider her for tenure during her initial appointment year; and

WHEREAS, Professor Aptekar’s tenure file was completed on March 1, 2021, including six external review letters assessing her scholarship; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Aptekar’s publication record is quite extensive for a scholar at this juncture of her career; a having published a path-breaking first book, fourteen peer- reviewed articles, seven book chapters, one forthcoming book chapter,three more articles under review, and two additional books near completion, including The Green Card Soldier: Between Model Immigrant and Security Threat, based on 70 interviews with immigrant veterans, and Beyond Dreamers, based on an extensive study of undocumented college students at the University; and

WHEREAS, One external reviewer commented on the innovative quality and centrality of Dr. Apteksr’s book on the field of immigration studies, stating that “If there is one area of her work completely beyond reproach it is her methodological rigour and creativity. Dr. Aptekar is perfectly able of conducting sophisticated analysis of large, extensive datasets. Through her commitment to diverse forms of original field work and highly situational analysis, she distinguishes herself from run-of-the- mill scholarship”; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Aptekar has a history of college, professional, and community service. In the short time she has been at “SLU”, she has become active on several School committees and program initiatives including the Urban Academy Committee, the “SLU” Curriculum Committee, the Awards Committee, and the Urban Capstone Revision Committee; and

WHEREAS, Professor Aptekar also provided technical assistance for the Diversity Scholarship Program and she has joined the faculty research group that, among other objectives, assists untenured faculty with their research; and

WHEREAS, Professionally, Professor Aptekar has been highly active, serving on the American Sociological Association’s Contexts editorial board; as book review editor for City and Community, and many other ASA-related activities and conferences; and also serving a three-year term on the Labor and Employment Relations Association (LERA) Thomas A. Kochan and Stephen R. Sleigh Best Dissertation Award.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

RESOLVED, That Dr. Sofya Aptekar be awarded early tenure in the Department of Urban Studies at the School of Labor and Urban Studies of The Graduate School and University Center, effective September 1, 2021 with an application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2), subject to financial ability.

EXPLANATION: Dr. Aptekar’s exemplary service record exhibits continued excellence in scholarship and teaching, and she is widely considered at the vanguard of her discipline, with her research and publications highly regarded nationally and internationally. Therefore, “SLU” should make every effort to retain her before she is lost to a competing institution.

CURRICULUM VITAE

NAME Sofya Aptekar

RECOMMENDATION FOR

APPOINTMENT

REAPPOINTMENT PROMOTION X REAPPOINTMENT WITH TENURE OTHER (Designation as Vice President, Dean, etc.)

CURRENT TITLE Associate Professor DEPARTMENT Urban Studies

EFFECTIVE DATE 08.26.20 SALARY RATE $104,260

I. HIGHER EDUCATION

Institution Dates Attended Degree & Major Date Conferred

Yale University 1997-2001 BA Sociology 05.2001

Princeton University 2004-2010 PhD Sociology 11.2010

II. EXPERIENCE

A. TEACHING EXPERIENCE Institution Department Rank Dates

Rutgers University Sociology adjunct Fall 2010

Brooklyn College Sociology adjunct Summer 2013

Queens College Sociology adjunct Spring and Fall 2012 Macaulay Honors College n/a adjunct Spring 2014

UMass Boston Sociology and Critical assistant professor 2014-2019 Ethnic and Community Studies

CUNY SLU Urban Studies associate professor 2020-

B. OTHER EXPERIENCE Institution Department Rank or title role Dates

Princeton University Office of Postdoctoral 2010-2011 Population research associate Research

Max Planck Institute for the Study Ethnic Diversity Postdoctoral 2011-2014 of Religious and Ethnic Diversity research fellow

III. ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL HONORS

Honor or Award Granting Institution Date

Research grant co-PI ($600,000) W.T. Grant Foundation 2017-2020

Visiting Fellowship Russell Sage Foundation 2019-2000

IV. PUBLICATIONS/CREATIVE WORKS

A. REFEREED PUBLICATIONS/CREATIVE WORKS, PERFORMED OR EXHIBITED (Peer-reviewed works) Book

2015. The Road to Citizenship: What Naturalization Means for Immigrants and the United States. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.

Refereed Articles

2020. “The Contemporary Immigrant Rights Movement in the United States and Capitalism,” Socialism and Democracy 33(3), 1-25. Special Issue on Seattle +20. With Marcel Paret and Shannon Gleeson.

2020. “The Tale of Two Community Gardens: Green Aesthetics versus Food Justice in the Big Apple,” Agriculture and Human Values. With Justin S. Myers. 37(3): 779-792.

2020. “Doctors as Migration Brokers in the Mandatory Medical Screenings of Immigrants to the United States.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 46(9): 1865-1885

2019. “The Public Library as Resistive Space in the Neoliberal City.” City & Community 18(4): 1203- 1219.

2019. “The Unbearable Lightness of the Cosmopolitan Canopy: Accomplishment of Diversity at an Urban Farmers Market.” City & Community 18(1): 71-87.

2019. “Super-diversity as a Methodological Approach: Re-centering Power and Inequality.” Ethnic and Racial Studies. Special Issue: Super-diversity in Everyday Life. 42(1): 53-70.

2017. “Looking Forward, Looking Back: Collective Memory and Neighborhood Identity in Two Urban Parks.” Symbolic Interaction 40(1): 101-121.

2016. “Gifts among Strangers: The Social Organization of Freecycle Giving.” Social Problems 63(2):266- 283.

2015. “Making Sense of Naturalization: What Citizenship Means to Naturalizing Immigrants in Canada and the USA.” Journal of International Migration and Integration 17(4), 1143-1161.

2015. “Visions of Public Space: Reproducing and Resisting Social Hierarchies in a Diverse Community Garden.” Sociological Forum 30(1): 209-227.

2014. “Citizenship Status and Patterns of Inequality in the United States and Canada.” Social Science Quarterly 95(2): 343-359.

2012. “Naturalization Ceremonies and the Role of Immigrants in the American Nation.” Citizenship Studies. 16(7): 937-952.

2009. “Contexts of Exit in the Migration of Russian Speakers from the Baltic Countries to Ireland.” Ethnicities 9(4):507-526.

2009. “Organizational Life and Political Incorporation of Two Asian Immigrant Groups: A Case Study.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 32(9):1511-1533.

Book Chapters/Invited Contributions

Forthcoming. “Immigration, Gentrification, and Neighborhood Change in Astoria.” In Immigrant Crossroads: Globalization, Incorporation, and Place-Making in Queens, NY, edited by Ron Hayduk, Tarry Hum, Francois Pierre Louis, and Michael Krasner. Under contract with Temple University Press.

2020. with Prita Lal and Justin Myers. “Community Gardens and Gentrification in New York City: The Uneven Politics of Facilitation, Accommodation, and Resistance.” In A Recipe for Gentrification: Food, Power, and Resistance in the City, edited by Alison Alkon, Yuki Kato, and Joshua Sbicca. New York: NYU Press.

2018. “Citizenship in the Green Card Army”. In Immigration Policy in the Age of Punishment: Detention, Deportation and Border Control, edited by David Brotherton and Philip Kretsedemas. New York: Columbia University Press.

2016. “Constructing the Boundaries of US Citizenship in the Era of Enforcement and Securitization.” In Citizenship, Identity and Nation-States in the 21st Century, edited by Nicole Stokes-DuPass and Ramona Fruja. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.

2015. “Boundaries and Surveillance in Astoria.” In Diversities Old and New: Socio-spatial Patterns in New York, Singapore, and Johannesburg, edited by Steven Vertovec. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.

2015. “Astoria, New York City.” In Diversities Old and New: Socio-spatial Patterns in New York, Singapore, and Johannesburg, edited by Steven Vertovec. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. (with Anna Cieslik)

2008. “Highly-Skilled but Unwelcome in Politics: Asian Indians and Chinese in a New Jersey Suburb.” In Civic Hopes and Political Realities: Immigrants, Community Organizations, and Political Engagement, edited by S. Karthick Ramakrishnan and Irene Bloemraad. New York: Russell Sage Foundation Press.

2007. “Sticking Around: Delayed Departure from the Parental Nest in Western Europe and Japan.” In The Price of Independence: The Economics of the Transition to Adulthood, edited by Sheldon Danziger and Cecilia Rouse. New York: Russell Sage Foundation Press. (with Katherine Newman)

Review Essay

2014. “Immigration in Diverse Cities: Review of One in Three and New York and Amsterdam edited by Nancy Foner”. Sociological Forum 29(4):1029-1032.

Scholarly Book Reviews

2018. “Forced Out and Fenced In: Immigration Tales From the Field.” by Tanya Maria Golash-Boza (ed). Migration Studies.

2018. “Live and Let Live: Diversity, Conflict, and Community in an Integrated Neighborhood.” by Evelyn Perry. American Journal of Sociology 123(6):1835-1836.

2017. “Building Dignified Worlds: Geographies of Collective Action.” by Gerda Roelvink. Contemporary Sociology 46(6): 712-714.

2017. “Citizenship and Its Others.” Edited by Bridget Anderson and Vanessa Hughes. Ethnic and Racial Studies 40(8): 1345-1346.

2015. “Asian America: Sociological and Interdisciplinary Perspectives” by Pawan Dhingra and Robyn Magalit Rodriguez. Ethnic and Racial Studies 38(13):

2015. “Paradise Transplanted: Migration and the Making of California Gardens” by Pierrette Hondagneu- Sotelo. Gender & Society DOI:10.1177/0891243215570734.

2014. “Civic Engagements: The Citizenship Practices of Indian & Vietnamese Immigrants by Caroline B. Brettell and Deborah Reed-Danahay.” Journal of American Studies 48(2):63.

2014. “Disenchanting Citizenship: Mexican Migrants and the Boundaries of Belonging by Luis Plascencia.” Political and Legal Anthropology Review 37(1): 187-189.

2014. “Regions Apart: The Four Societies of Canada and the United States by Edward Grabb and James Curtis.” Social Forces 93(1): 16.

2011. “Asian Immigration to the United States by Philip Q. Yang.” Ethnic and Racial Studies. 34(12):2216-2217.

2011. “Partly Colored: Asian Americans and Racial Anomaly in the Segregated South by Leslie Bow.” Ethnic and Racial Studies. 34(2): 380-381.

2011. “Chains of Babylon: The Rise of Asian America by Daryl J. Maeda.” Ethnic and Racial Studies. 34(1):175-176.

2008. “Immigrants and Boomers: Forging a New Social Contract for the Future of America by Dowel Myers.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 31(8):1504-1506.

B. OTHER PUBLICATIONS/ CREATIVE WORKS, PERFORMED OR EXHIBITED (Non-peer-reviewed works)

2020. All Undocumented Immigrants Deserve Citizenship—Not Just “Essential Workers.” In These Times. July 16. 2016. “Celebrating New Citizens, Defining the Nation.” Contexts 15(2): 46-51.

2015. “Social Norms and Resistance on the City Bus.” Metropolitics.

2012. “Immigration and Customs Enforcement.” The Making of Modern Immigration: An Encyclopedia of People and Ideas. Patrick J. Hayes, editor. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO.

V. UNPUBLISHED WORK (Supported by evidence, including unpublished PhD or Master’s Thesis)

“The Violence of Asylum: The Case of Undocumented Chinese Migration to the US.” With Amy Hsin. Revise and Resubmit, Social Forces

“Heterogeneous Effects of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) on Undocumented College Students’ Educational Outcomes” with Keitaro Okura and Amy Hsin. Under review. Social Forces

“Mode of Entry and Adjustment of Status among Diverse Undocumented Youth: Unpacking notions of deservingness embedded in US immigration law.” With Amy Hsin. Under review. American Journal of Sociology

“Enlistment of the foreign-born in the US military: US empire and transnational militarism.” Under review. Ethnic and Racial Studies

“Managing Illegality on Campus: Undocumented and DACAmented College Students in the Era of Trump.” With Holly Reed and Amy Hsin. Under review. Journal of Ethnic and Racial Studies.

“Framing the Immigrant in Labor Unions and US Military.” With Shannon Gleeson. Preparing for submission.

VI. GRANTS AND SPONSORED PROGRAMS

A. External

Name of Grant Funding Agency Dollar Award Period Role (PI, Co-PI) Amount (underline current (direct awards) costs/total)

Immigration Status W.T. Grant $600,000 2018-2020 Co-PI and Higher Foundation Education: Evidence from a Large Urban University

VII. CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS AND INVITED LECTURES (Indicate invited lectures/presentations with *)

Title of Presentation/Lecture Name and Location of Date Conference/Lecture

DACA and Race* University of California-Merced 09.2020

Enlistment of the Foreign-born in the US American Sociological Association 08.2020 Military: US Empire and Transnational Annual Meeting Virtual Event Militarism

Beyond Dreamers: The Under-analyzed CUNY Graduate Center Immigration 09.2019 Complexity of the Undocumented Youth Seminar Series Population.*

The Green Card Soldier: Immigrants in Association of Humanist Sociologists 10.2019 the US Military Annual Meeting, El Paso, TX

Naturalization as Exclusion* Global Migration Conference, Boston 04.2019 College Law School

Framing the immigrant in labor unions Social Science Research Council, 03.2019 and the US military (with Shannon Anxieties of Democracy. Immigration: Gleeson)* The Politics of Inclusion and the Politics of Threat Workshop. NYC

Between diversity asset and security Eastern Sociological Society Annual 02.2019 threat: Foreign nationals in the US Meeting. Boston. military

Co-ethnic communities and educational Migrant Illegalities Conference. Brown 10.2018 and occupational participation of Asian University and Latino undocumented youth in New York City

The public library as resistive space in the Conferência Internacional Bibliotecas 09.2018 neoliberal city* (conference keynote) Públicas, políticas culturais e leitura pública. Lisbon, Portugal.

Beyond Dreamers: The Under-analyzed American Sociological Association 08.2018 Complexity of the Undocumented Youth Annual Meeting Virtual Event, NYC Population.

The Unbearable Lightness of The The Roots and Branches of Interpretive 08.2018 Cosmopolitan Canopy: Accomplishment Sociology: Cultural, Pragmatist, and Of Diversity at An Urban Farmers Market Psychosocial Approaches, Philadelphia

Co-ethnic Communities and Employment Law and Society Association Annual 06.2018 Trajectories of Asian and Latino Meeting in Toronto Undocumented Youth in New York City.

On the Sidelines: Undocumented College Immigrant and Refugee Rights in 04.2018 Students Not Involved in Dreamer Turbulent Times Conference, Baruch Activism College

The Tale of Two Gardens: Reproducing Urban Inequalities Workshop, Boston 10.2017 and Contesting Social Inequities through University Urban Agriculture*

The Public Library as Resistive Space in American Sociological Association 08.2017 the Neoliberal City Annual Meeting, Montreal

The Green Card Army: Immigrant Centro de Investigaciones sobre América 06.2017 Enlistment in the US Military.” del Norte at Universitad Nacional Presentation at conference workshop, Autonoma de Mexico "Towards a new research academic agenda of immigration and education for immigrants in U.S. and Mexico*

Citizenship and Naturalization among Law and Society Association Meeting, 06.2017 Immigrant Members of the US Military: Mexico City Meanings and Mechanisms

The Whole Damn System is Guilty as The Common Sessions in Critical 05.2017 Hell: Deportation and Exploitation in the Criminology, CUNY Grad Center US Immigration System*

Cultivating Diversity: Neighborhood American Association of Geographers 04.2017 Change and Place-Making in an Urban Annual Meeting, Boston Community Garden

The Green Card Army: Immigrant Hunter College Public Sociology Lecture 03.2017 Soldiers in the US Military*

Looking Forward, Looking Back: Making American Sociological Association 08.2016 Sense of a Changing Neighborhood Annual Meeting, Seattle through Two City Parks

Civil Surgeons and the Mandatory Society for the Study of Social Problems 08.2016 Medical Screenings of Immigrants to the Annual Meeting. Seattle United States

Super-diversity as a Methodological Workshop on Superdiversity: A 04.2016 Approach: Ironing out Differences Transatlantic Conversation. CUNY between Differences?* Graduate Center

Civil Surgeons and the Work of Medical Harvard Migration Workshop 04.2016 Screening of Immigrants to the US

Race and Immigration* Boston University Core Curriculum 03.2016

Civil Surgeons and the Work of Medical Eastern Sociological Society Annual 02.2016 Screening of Immigrants to the US Meeting. Boston

Citizenship Acquisition Among Members Eastern Sociological Society Annual 02.2016 of the Military Meeting. Boston

Medical Gatekeepers of the Nation: Emerging Immigration Scholars 02.2016 Preliminary Findings from a Survey of Conference, UCLA Center for the Study Civil Surgeons of International Migration, Los Angeles

Fighting for Voice: Reproducing Power in Association for Humanist Sociology 04.2017 a Queens Community Garden Annual Meeting, Portland

The Road to Citizenship* Queens College Sociology Colloquium 10.2015

Negotiating Diversity in Motion: Eastern Sociological Society Annual 02.2011 Breakdowns and Emergent Affinities on Meeting, NYC Public Transportation

Experiencing Loss and Change through Eastern Sociological Society Annual 02.2011 Urban Public Space Meeting, NYC

Visions of Public Space: Reproducing and American Sociological Association 08.2010 Resisting Social Hierarchies in a Diverse Annual Meeting, San Francisco Community Garden

Conviviality, Contestation, and Exclusion American Sociological Association 08.2009 in Diverse Public Spaces Annual Meeting, Denver

Crossing into Citizenship in Canada and American Sociological Association 02.2009 the United States Annual Meeting, Las Vegas

Gifts among Strangers: Competing Eastern Sociological Society Annual 02.2009 Models of Fairness in a Local Freecycle Meeting, Philadelphia Network

Naturalization Ceremonies and Immigrant American Sociological Association 08.2009 Citizenship: From Liability to Annual Meeting, San Francisco Supercitizen

Determinants of Naturalization in Canada American Sociological Association 08.2008 and the United States: Annual Meeting, Boston The Changing Role of Education

VIII. SERVICE

A. COLLEGE SERVICE

Name of Committee or Project Type of Service Role (i.e. Chair) Dates

Urban Academy Committee Member 08/20-

Tri-campus Committee Member 09/20-

Curriculum Committee Member 08/20-

Course Caps Committee Member 08/20-

Tuition Scholarship Committee Member 11/20-

B. UNIVERSITY SERVICE

Name of Committee or Project Type of Service Role (i.e. Member) Dates

PSC-CUNY Phone banking union member 08/20-

C. COMMUNITY SERVICE: Include public service to the NYC community beyond the campus (e.g. mentoring of local high school students) and service to the community of your discipline (e.g. journal reviewing/editing, conference organizing)

Name of Organization or Type of Service Role Dates Project

Society for the Study of Social Award selection Committee member, 2021 Problems Section on Racial and Eduardo Bonilla-Silva Ethnic Minorities Book Award Committee

Labor and Employment Award selection Committee member, 2019- Relations Association Thomas A. Kochan and Stephen R. Sleigh Best Dissertation Award Committee

ASA Section on International Award selection Louis Wirth Book 2019 Migration Award Committee member

ASA Section on Altruism, Award selection Section book award 2019 Morality, and Social Solidarity committee member

Eastern Sociological Society Award selection Community Service 2019 and Activism Award ASA Section on Racial and Award selection Member of selection 2015 Ethnic Minorities committee for the Founders award

ASA Section on Racial and Award selection James E. Blackwell 2014 Ethnic Minorities Distinguished Graduate Student Paper Award committee member

ASA Section on Racial and Conference Session organizer, 2020 Ethnic Minorities organizing “Black Community, Entrepreneurship & Resistance at Work”

ASA Section on International Conference Session organizer, 2020 Migration organizing “Critical Migration Studies and Under- explored Intersectionalities: Racialization, Global Geopolitics, and Indigenous Peoples’ Mobilities. “

ASA Community and Urban Conference Session organizer, 2020 Sociology Section organizing “New Forms of Precarious Urban Labor”

Eastern Sociological Society Conference Organizer of Mini- 2020 organizing conference: Toward a Critical Migration Studies

American Sociological Conference Professional 2019 and 2020 Association (ASA) organizing Development Workshop organizer “Sociologists Unite Collective Action for Academic Workers”

Eastern Sociological Society Conference Panel organizer, “The 2019 organizing neoliberal assault on public higher education: Race, class, gender, and the academic labor movement”

American Sociological Conference Thematic session 2018 Association (ASA) organizing organizer, “Race and the Sharing Economy” American Association of Conference Session organizer, 2017 Geographers organizing Food Justice in the Changing City

UMass Boston Conference Planning Committee 2016-2018 organizing member, Resisting Systemic Oppression Teach-in week

American Sociological Conference Special session 2016 Association (ASA) organizing organizer, “Sociology of Community Gardens”

Eastern Sociological Society Conference Organizer, Mini- 2016 organizing Conference on Immigration

UMass Boston Conference Planning Committee 2015-2016 organizing member, Social Theory Forum

Eastern Sociological Society Conference Organizer, NYC 2015 organizing Spotlight Session: “Gentrification in the City of Extremes”

ASA Section on Racial and Conference Session organizer, 2014 Ethnic Minorities organizing “Race and Ethnicity in Everyday Encounters.”

Eastern Sociological Society Conference Session organizer, 2014 organizing “The Invisible Work of Getting Along: Everyday Interactions Across and Through Difference.”

ASA Section on International Conference Steering committee for 2013 Migration organizing Making Connections: 2013 International Migration Section’s Mini-Conference

Massey University Anthropology Dissertation External examiner, 2020 Department advisement Virginia Webb

UMass Boston Sociology Dissertation Dissertation committee 2018- Department advisement member, Jennifer Skinnon

UMass Boston School of Global Dissertation Dissertation committee 2018- Inclusion and Social advisement member, Chioma Development Nnagi Russell Sage Foundation Grant application Peer reviewer, Visiting 2020 review Scholar Applications

Swiss National Science Grant application Peer reviewer, 250,000 2018 Foundation review euro proposal

Social Science and Humanities Grant application Peer reviewer, 250+K 2017 Research Council of Canada review Canadian $ grant

City & Community Journal editing Book review editor 2020-

Contexts Journal editing Editorial Board 2017-2020 member

The Policy Group on Labor movement Partnering researcher 2017- Tradeswomen’s Issues

Public Higher Education Labor movement Organizer, outreach, 2019- Workers workshop planner

UMass Boston Critical Ethnic Master’s thesis Thesis committee 2018-2019 and Community Studies advisement chair, Juan Pablo Blanco

UMass Boston Critical Ethnic Master’s thesis Thesis committee 2018-2019 and Community Studies advisement chair, Taina Teravainen

Manuscript reviewer for ACME; Provide feedback to Peer reviewer 2008- Agriculture and Human Values; editors and American Behavioral Scientist; manuscript authors American Journal of Sociology; American Sociological Review; Asian Anthropology; British Journal of Sociology; City & Community; Contexts; Ethnic and Racial Studies; Ethnography; Geoforum; Humanity and Society; International Migration Review; Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies; Journal of Humanistic Psychology; Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development; Laboratorium; Latino Studies; New Media and Society; Qualitative Sociology; Social Forces; Social Problems; Sociological Forum; Sociological Inquiry; Sociological Perspectives; Social Sciences; Sociological Spectrum; Sociology of Race and Ethnicity; Urban Planning

IX. MEMBERSHIP IN PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES

Name of Professional Organization Membership Role (i.e. Board) Dates

American Sociological Association Editorial board of ASA journal 2017- Member 2005-

Eastern Sociological Society Member 2005-

Society for the Study of Social Problems Member 2016-

Labor and Employment Relations Dissertation Award committee 2020- Association Member

X. OTHER NOTABLE ACCOMPLISHMENTS

● Invited keynote speaker at an international conference on public libraries in Lisbon, Portugal (09/18) ● Guest appearance on The Annex, an academic sociology-themed podcast to discuss labor organizing (10/20)

DATE SUBMITTED

Board of Trustees of The City University of New York

RESOLUTION TO Award Mary Theresa Kiely with Early Tenure at Queens College with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2)

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, Dr. Mary Theresa Kiely was hired at Queens College in the Fall 2015 after working at St. John’s University between 2012 and 2015 as an Assistant Professor and her initial appointment letter states she would be considered for early tenure; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Kiely’s scholarship on teaching writing to students with disabilities addresses practical issues such as using technology, engaging in evidence-based practices, and exploring how teachers’ beliefs impact their delivery of writing instruction; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Kiely has a total of 13 publications; 11 of those publications are journal articles and 2 are book chapters and while at the University of Florida (2005- 11), both as a doctoral student and in several teaching and research positions (Research Assistant between 2005 and 2009, Senior Research Associate between 2009 and 2011, Assistant Scholar between 2011-12), she was a co-author on four publications and a sole author on one; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Kiely’s reviewers refer to her continuous productivity in national presentations at the Council of Exceptional Children annual conferences and that her work is being published in highly regarded journals in the field of special education such as Exceptional Teacher Education and Special Education, and Learning Disabilities Research and Practice; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Kiely was part of a small group of special education faculty who wrote and obtained funding to develop three fully on-line programs and was one of the first instructors to teach online in the Exceptional Children’s Program, devoting much time to developing fully online courses that have synchronous as well as asynchronous components; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Kiely’s commitment to teaching is also evident in her participation in the Open Educational Resources Faculty Fellowship at the Queens College Library and Center for Teaching and Learning, participating in this training and directly applying what she learned by incorporating open resources within her courses; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Kiely has taught a diverse group of students inThe Graduate Programs in Special Education, including students in a combined undergraduate/graduate program as well as seasoned graduate students who are already working as teachers.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

RESOLVED, That Dr. Mary Theresa Kiely be awarded early tenure in the Department of Special Education at Queens College, effective September 1, 2021 with an application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2), subject to financial ability.

EXPLANATION: Dr. Kiely is a dedicated scholar, teacher, and researcher who is highly respected in her discipline, with an extensive body of publications and service. Therefore, Queens College should make every effort to retain her before she is lost to a competing institution.

Queens College Curriculum Vitae: Professorial Titles

BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION

NAME: Mary Theresa Kiely

COLLEGE: Queens College

HIGHER EDUCATION A. Degrees (most recent first)

Institution Dates Attended Degree/Major Dates Conferred University of Florida 2005-2011 Ph.D./Special 2011 Education New York University 1993-1995 MA/Literature 1995 Iona College 1989-1993 BA/English; 1993 Journalism

B. Additional Higher Education and/or Education in Progress

Institution Dates Attended Courses, etc. University of Florida 2004 Courses leading to the Gifted Endorsement University of South Florida 2003 Courses leading to the Gifted Endorsement University of Maryland 2002 Journalism coursework to support teaching high school journalism Mercy College, Bronx, NY 1998-9 Courses on teaching special education and reading Trinity College Dublin, Ireland January-May 1991 Humanities core classes for the BA at Iona Irish Institute, Leuven, Belgium May-June 1991 The European Economic Community Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 2

EXPERIENCE A. Teaching (include part- and full-time experience at Queens College, most recent first)

Institution Dates Rank Department CUNY Queens College 2015-Present Assistant Professor Educational and Community Programs St. John’s University 2012-2015 Assistant Professor Education Specialties and Counseling University of Florida 2011-2012 Assistant Scholar Special Education (Faculty rank) Homestead Senior High 2001-2005 Teacher Language Arts and School, FL Exceptional Student Education Key West High School, 2000-2001 Teacher Language Arts FL Evander Childs High 1997-2000 Teacher English and Literacy School, Bronx Mercy College 1995-2000 Adjunct English; Psychology Iona College 1996-1999 Adjunct English

B. Other Than Teaching (include experience at Queens College, most recent first)

Institution Dates Title Department University of Florida 2009-2011 Senior Research Special Education Associate, Project Coordinator, Instructor University of Florida 2005-2009 Research Assistant, Special Education Instructor

RECORD OF APPOINTMENT IN EACH TITLE AT QUEENS COLLEGE (most recent first; include date of tenure, if awarded)

Dates Rank August 26, 2015-Present Assistant Professor

ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL HONORS

Date Honor 2019-2020 The Open Educational Resources Faculty Fellowship, CUNY Queens College Libraries and Center for Teaching & Learning. Awarded to support teaching using open resources. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 3

2019 The CUNY Academy Stewart Travel Awards for Assistant Professors for National & International Conferences, CUNY Academy for the Humanities and Sciences. Awarded to support travel to present a paper at a conference. 2018-2019 Faculty Fellowship Publication Program (FFPP) for 2018-2019 CUNY, Office of the Dean for Recruitment and Diversity. Awarded to support scholarship leading to tenure and promotion. 2013 CEC Division for Research Beginning Career Workshop, Council for Exceptional Children, Division for Research. Competitive selection to the day long workshop April, 2013, at the CEC Conference, San Antonio, TX. 2012 Discussion Leader at the Teacher Education Division Researcher Roundtable, Council for Exceptional Children, Teacher Education Division. Competitive selection to lead discussions at the November, 2012, CEC-TED Conference, Grand Rapids, MI. 2012 Outstanding Student Research Award, Council for Exceptional Children, Division for Research. Awarded April 13, 2012 at the Reception for Council for Exceptional Children, Division for Research at the CEC Conference, Denver. 2011 Outstanding Graduate Leadership Award, University of Florida, College of Education. Awarded on April 15, 2011 at the College of Education Recognition Dinner, Gainesville, FL. 2005 University of Florida Research Assistantship, University of Florida, College of Education. Awarded full support for doctoral studies from Research in Teacher Education (RITE), a federally funded grant awarded to Dr. Mary Brownell and Dr. Paul Sindelar. 2004 National Board Teacher Certification (NBC), Miami-Dade Public Schools, Excellent Teaching Program. Awarded at Miami-Dade Public Schools at the Excellent Teaching Program Dinner. The National Board Certification is the most respected professional certification available in education. While state teacher licensure systems set the basic requirements, completion of National Board Certification signifies that teachers have voluntarily gone much further. NBCTs have developed and demonstrated the advanced knowledge, skills, and practices required of an outstanding educator. 2002 American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE) Fellowship, University of Maryland. Awarded for study in teaching journalism and writing in secondary schools. 1989-1993 Academic Scholarship, Iona College, New Rochelle, NY. Awarded full tuition for study leading to the baccalaureate degree. 1989-1993 Honors Program, Iona College, NY. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 4

MEMBERSHIP IN PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES (last five years only) 2005-Present American Educational Research Association (AERA) member • Division K, Teacher Education: Teacher Professional Development • Division K, Teacher Education: Teacher Education Program Design and Innovations • Division K, Teacher Education: Focus on the Lives of Teachers • Special Education SIG

2005-Present Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) • Teacher Education Division (TED) • Division for Research (DR) • New York State Federation of Chapters (NYS CEC) • Exceptional Children Educators with Disabilities Caucus (CEC- EDC)

2010-Present World Education Research Association (WERA)

2019-Present Brain Injury Association of America (BIAA)

2019-Present National Center for Learning Disabilities (NCLD) Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 5

(2) TEACHING

1. List all courses that you have taught in the previous four semesters (whether at Queens College or at the Graduate Center). For each course listed here, upload your syllabus and at least one example of student work. (Student work should be anonymous but the grade given should be noted.) Feel free to upload anything else you feel is relevant. 2. In addition, list all student mentoring—whether it be undergraduate independent studies or graduate thesis/dissertation supervision, at Queens or at the Graduate Center. (Note that the College will provide official information on your complete workload as well as the content of your student evaluations; you do not have to do this.)

Semester Description 1. Give course numbers and titles. As instructed above, upload syllabi and at least one example of student work for each course listed here. 2. List most recent courses first.

2020 Spring ECPSE 714: Language & Literacy: Principles & Practices in Adolescent Special Education (Adolescent MSEd) ECPSE 713: Language & Literacy: Principles & Practices in Childhood Special Education (Childhood MSEd) ECPSE 700: Foundations of Special Education - Online 2019 Fall ECPSE 703: Introduction to Assessment in Adolescent Special Education (Section combined students from Urban Teacher Residency MAT Program and Adolescent MSEd) ECPSE 703: Introduction to Assessment in Adolescent Special Education (Project Engage Online Post-Masters Certificate) combined with ECPSE 702: Introduction to Assessment in Childhood Special Education (Project Engage Online Post Masters Certificate) ECPSE 700: Foundations of Special Education (Online) 2019 Spring ECPSE 714: Language & Literacy: Principles & Practices in Adolescent Special Education (MSEd) New Faculty course release 6 credits 2018 Fall ECPSE 703: Introduction to Assessment in Adolescent Special Education – (Project Engage Online Post-Masters Certificate) CUNY Fellowship course release 3 credits New Visions/UTR course release 3 credits Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 6

(3) SCHOLARSHIP AND CREATIVE WORK

1. For all published work, give complete bibliographic entries including total page numbers. Except for works listed in section (K), all works listed should be in their final form, published or in final proofs. Everything else should be listed in section (K) Submitted Works and Works in Progress, annotated with a description of the specific stage of the work. 2. For any work published on-line, give active links as well as word counts. 3. All exhibitions or performances that have occurred or are occurring right now should be listed in section (E). Include as much detail as you can, e.g. title, nature of work, venue, group or solo work, dates, attendance, etc. Works that are planned should be listed in section (K). 4. For collaborative work (written or performance-based), indicate the percentage of work and the nature of that work done by the candidate, e.g. conceptual, editing, the actual writing, the actual performance, etc. In addition, for collaborative work, indicate the role of each contributor using the following superscripts: H=high school student; U=undergraduate student; M=master’s student; D=doctoral student; PD=post- doctoral research fellow; CQ= Queens College faculty collaborator and staff; C=collaborator (student or faculty, work conducted at another institution). 5. In all cases, list most recent works first (the boxes will expand as you add information). 6. Note additional instructions on how to notate work that is refereed, invited, etc.

(A) BOOKS and other MONOGRAPHS N/A 1. Published since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

2. Published prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

(B) JOURNAL ARTICLES 1. Published since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Indicate refereed articles with an asterisk (*). *CPark, Y. P., Kiely, M. T., & CBrownell, M. T., & CBenedict, A. E. (2019). Relationships among special education teachers’ knowledge, instructional practice and students’ performance in reading fluency. Learning Disabilities Research & Practice. 34(2), 85-96. Conceptualization = 60% Data Collection/Analysis = 40% Writing = 40% Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 7

*Kiely, M. T. (2018). Exemplary teachers’ understandings of writing instruction for students with disabilities included in secondary language arts classes: It’s a beautiful struggle. Exceptional Education International. 28(3), 122-141.

*CBrownell, M., Kiely, M. T., CHaager, D., CBoardman, A., CCorbett, N., CAlgina, J., CDingle, M. P., & CUrbach, J. (2017). Literacy Learning Cohorts: Content-focused approach to improving special education teachers’ reading instruction. Exceptional Children, 83(2), 143-164. Conceptualization = 25% Data Collection/Analysis = 50% Writing = 40%

*CLeko, M. M., CBrownell, M. T., CSindelar, P. T. & Kiely, M. T. (2015). Envisioning the future of special education personnel preparation in a standards-based era. Exceptional Children, 82(1), 25-43. Conceptualization = 25% Data Collection/Analysis = 25% Writing = 25%

2. Published prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Indicate refereed articles with an asterisk (*). *CLeko, M. M., Kiely, M. T., CBrownell, M. T., COsipova, A., CDingle, M. P., & CMundy, C. (2015). Understanding special educators' learning opportunities in collaborative groups: The role of discourse. Teacher Education and Special Education, 38(2), 138-157. Conceptualization = 50% Data Collection/Analysis = 25% Writing = 40%

*CBenedict, A. E., CPark, Y., CBrownell, M. T., CLauterbach, A. & Kiely, M. T. (2013). Using lesson study to align instruction within the Response to Intervention framework. TEACHING Exceptional Children, 45(5), 22-30. Conceptualization = 50% Data Collection/Analysis = 25% Writing = 25%

* DOsipova, A., DPrichard, B., CBoardman, A., Kiely, M. T. & DCarroll, P. (2011). Refocusing the lens: Enhancing elementary special education reading instruction through video self- reflection. Learning Disabilities Research & Practice, 26(3), 158-171. Conceptualization = 20% Data Collection/Analysis = 30% Writing = 25%

*CBrownell, M. T., CSindelar, P. T., DKiely, M. T. & CDanielson, L. C. (2010). Special education teacher quality and preparation: Exposing foundations, constructing a new model. Exceptional Children, 76(3), 357-377. Conceptualization = 33% Data Collection/Analysis = 75% Writing = 35%

*DLeko, M. M., DMundy, C. A. & DKiely, M. T. (2009). Reading disabilities: Research, recommendations, and resources for teachers. The Florida Reading Journal, 45(2), 8-16. Conceptualization = 33% Data Collection/Analysis = 33% Writing = 33%

*CSindelar, P., CMcCray, E., DKiely, M. T. & DKamman, M. (2008). The impact of No Child Left Behind on special education teacher supply and the preparation of the workforce. Advances in Learning and Behavioral Disabilities, 21, 89-123. Conceptualization = 50% Data Collection/Analysis = 25% Writing = 40% Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 8

*Kiely, M. T. (2007). Preparing special educators in reading instruction: The impact of state policies. Journal of the International Association of Special Education, June, 2007. Retrieved December 13, 2011, from http://iase.coe.nau.edu/IASE/.

(C) CHAPTERS IN BOOKS/ANTHOLOGIES 1. Published since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Indicate refereed chapters with an asterisk (*). *Kiely, M. T. (2017). Enhancing instruction for students with academic needs: Strategies for writing skills. In CQL. Gibson and F. E. Obiakor (Eds.), Computer based technology for special and multicultural education: Enhancing 21st century learning. New York: Plural Publishing, Inc.

2. Published prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Indicate refereed chapters with an asterisk (*). *Kiely, M. T., CBrownell, M. T., CBenedict, A. & CLauterbach, A. L. (2014). Teachers’ beliefs about learners: Teachers’ beliefs about students with special needs and inclusion. In H. R. Fives and M. G. Gill (Eds.), International handbook of research on teacher beliefs (pp. 475-491). New York: Routledge. Conceptualization = 75% Data Collection/Analysis = 65% Writing = 70%

(D) ARTICLES IN CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS (full articles only) N/A 1. Published since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion 1. Include only full articles based on conference talks. 2. Indicate refereed presentations with an asterisk (*). Indicate invited presentations with a double asterisk (**). 3. For collaborative work, indicate the presenting author with a hashtag (#). 4. Entries listed here should not be repeated in section (H) Oral Presentations, below.

2. Published prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Follow the instructions above. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 9

(E) EXHIBITIONS/PERFORMANCES N/A 1. Took place since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Note that reviews of work, specifically, are listed in Section (G) below and do not have to be included here.

2. Took place prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Follow the instructions above.

(F) REVIEWS (by the candidate, of others’ performances or scholarly works) N/A 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

(G) REVIEWS (by others, of the candidate’s performances or scholarly works) N/A 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

(H) ORAL PRESENTATIONS, ADDRESSES, AND MASTER CLASSES 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion 1. Indicate refereed presentations with an asterisk (*). Indicate invited presentations with a double asterisk (**). 2. For collaborative work, indicate the presenting author with a hashtag (#). Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 10

3. Entries listed in section (D) should not be repeated here.

** CCrockett, J., #Kiely, M. T., & # CO’Brien, K. M. (2020, February). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Portland, OR.

*Kiely, M. T., & Benedict, A. (2019, October). Teaching at the intersection of language, literacy and disability. Paper presented at New York State Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Annual Conference, Tarrytown, NY.

*Kiely, M. T. (2019, April). Teachers’ understandings of writing instruction for included students with disabilities: It’s a beautiful struggle. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), Toronto, ON.

** CCrockett, J., #Kiely, M. T., & # CO’Brien, K. M. (2019, February). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Indianapolis, IN.

*Kiely, M. T. (2018, October). Writing instruction in secondary Language Arts classes. Paper presented at New York State Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Annual Conference, Albany, NY.

*Kiely, M. T. (2018, February). Technology to support writing instruction for students with disabilities. Paper presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Tampa, FL.

**# CCrockett, J., #Kiely, M. T., & # CO’Brien, K. M. (2018, February). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Tampa, FL.

*Kiely, M. T., #CBenedict, A E. & CMurphy, K. M. (2017, October). Equity, diversity & inclusion. Paper presented at New York State Council for Exceptional Children Annual Conference, Binghamton, NY.

**#CCrockett, J. & #Kiely, M. T. (2017, April). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Boston, MA.

*Kiely, M. T. (2016, November). Using technology to enhance writing instruction for CLD students with disabilities. Paper presented at New York State Council for Exceptional Children Annual Conference, Buffalo, NY. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 11

**CCrockett, J. & #CKiely, M. T. (2016, April). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, St. Louis, MO.

**Kiely, M. T. (2016, March). Secondary content area teachers’ supports for students with disabilities in inclusive classes. Paper presented at the Queens College Department of Secondary Education and Youth Services Research Symposium, Queens, NY.

*Kiely, M. T. & Rogers, J. (2015, November). Developing preservice teachers’ expertise through scaffolded field experiences. Paper presented at New York State Council for Exceptional Children Annual Conference, Saratoga Springs, NY.

**Kiely, M. T. (2015, November). Secondary content area teachers’ supports for students with disabilities in inclusive classes. Paper presented at the Queens College Department of Educational and Community Programs Research Symposium, Queens, NY.

*#CLeko, M. M., #CBrownell, M. T., #CSindelar, P. T., Kiely, M. T. & #CBenedict, A. (2015, November). Envisioning the future of special education personnel preparation in a standards-based era. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Teacher Education Division (TED) of the Council for Exceptional Children (TED), Tempe, AZ.

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Follow the instructions above. **CCrockett, J. & #Kiely, M. T., (2015, April). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, San Diego, CA.

*#Kiely, M.T., #DPatterson, K., #DEgan, D., MSachs, L. & # MO’Meara, S. (2014, October). Secondary content area teachers’ supports for students with disabilities in inclusive classes. Paper presented at New York State Council for Exceptional Children Annual Conference, Syracuse, NY.

**#CCrockett, J. & #Kiely, M. T. (2014, April). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Philadelphia, PA.

**Kiely, M. T. (2014, April). Research in teacher quality. Paper presented to the St. John’s University Faculty Forum, Queens, NY.

**Kiely, M. T. (2014, March). Supporting students with disabilities in literacy: Writing. Presentation at the Institute for Catholic Schools, Queens, NY. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 12

*#Kiely, M. T., #DBenedict, A. & #CCorbett, N. (2013, November). Instructional decision- making: A useful tool to better understand teacher learning. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Teacher Education Division (TED) of the Council for Exceptional Children (TED), Fort Lauderdale, FL.

*#CBrownell, M. T., #Kiely, M. T., #CBoardman, A. & #CCorbett, N. (2013, April). Literacy Learning Cohorts: Effective professional development for special education teachers. Roundtable presentation at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), San Francisco, CA.

*#CBrownell, M. T., #Kiely, M. T., #CBoardman, A. & #CCorbett, N. (2013, April). Literacy Learning Cohorts: Professional development that works. Paper presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, San Antonio, TX.

**C#Crockett, J. & #Kiely, M. T. (2013, April). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, San Antonio, TX.

*#CBrownell, M. T., #Kiely, M. T., #CDingle, M. & #CCorbett, N. (2012, November). Literacy Learning Cohorts: Effective content-focused professional development. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Teacher Education Division (TED) of the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC), Grand Rapids, MI.

*#DPark, Y., #CBrownell, M., #Kiely, M. T., & #DKost, A. (2012, April). Investigating a consensus rating model for judging special education teacher effectiveness. Paper presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Denver, CO.

*#DBenedict, A. & #Kiely, M. T. (2012, April). How do coaches use language to prompt teacher reflexivity? Paper presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Denver, CO.

**#Kiely, M. T. & #DBenedict, A. (2012, April). Writing a successful conference proposal. Presentation to TED Kaleidoscope participants at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Denver, CO.

**CCrockett, J. & #Kiely, M. T. (2012, April). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Denver, CO.

*#Kiely, M. T. & #DMurphy, K. (2012, January). Addressing power imbalances in teacher professional development research with qualitative methods. Paper presented at The Qualitative Report (TQR) 3rd Annual Conference, Fort Lauderdale, FL. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 13

*#DBenedict, A., # DLauterbach, A., Kiely, M. T., & #DBettini, E. (2011, October). Deciphering decoding: Practical tips for practitioners providing explicit instruction in decoding. Paper presented at Florida Council for Exceptional Children (FCEC), Jacksonville, FL.

*#DPark, Y., Kiely, M. T., CBrownell, M. T. &CLombardino, L. (2011, May). Exploring the predictors of reading achievement with English language learners: A literature review. Paper presented at the 56th Annual Convention of the International Reading Association (IRA), Orlando, FL.

*#DPark, Y., #Kiely, M. T., CBrownell, M. T. & DPark, Y. (2011, April). The implications of teachers’ knowledge of reading fluency for teachers’ practice and student performance. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), New Orleans, LA.

**C#Crockett, J., #Kiely, M. T., CAl Otaiba, S., CHarris, K. & CWehmeyer, M. (2011, April). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, National Harbor, MD.

*#DBenedict, A. E., #Kiely, M. T., & CBrownell, M. T. (2011, April). Understanding coaching within the context of on-going professional development in word study: Exploring the role of cognitive dissonance in one special education teacher’s coaching experience. Paper presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo. Washington D.C.

*#CHaager, D., #Kiely, M. T., #CDingle, M. P., #CBoardman, A. G. & #CUrbach, J. (2011 February). Using cohorts and coaching to support reading instruction in special education. Panel presentation at the Nineteenth Annual Pacific Coast Research Conference (PCRC), Coronado, CA.

*#CLeko, M., CBrownell, M. T., #Kiely, M. T., DOsipova, A., CDingle, M. P. & #DMundy, C. A. (2010, April). Maximizing learning opportunities in a special education professional development project. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), Denver, CO.

**CCrockett, J., #Kiely, M. T., CCarter, E., CHarris, K. & CLane, K. L. (2010, April). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Nashville, TN.

**#CBrownell, M. T., #CSindelar, P., #Kiely, M.T., #CDanielson, L., #CGillespie, P., #CHardman, M., & #CLignugaris-Kraft, B. (2009, April). Special education teacher preparation: An entity in need of identity. TED Showcase Invited Session at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Seattle, WA. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 14

**#CCrockett, J., #Kiely, M. T., CCook, B., CCoyne, M. & CHarris, K. (2009, April). Graduate student research colloquium: Exploring the hallmarks of excellent special education research. Panel discussion at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Seattle, WA.

*#DMundy, C. A., #DLeko, M., #Kiely, M. T. & #DKing, L. (2009, April). The reading knowledge and practice of three secondary special educators in a personnel preparation program. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), San Diego, CA.

*#Kiely, M. T. (2008, April). Examining teacher knowledge of writing instruction for students with disabilities included in secondary Language Arts classes. Paper presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Boston.

*#Kiely, M. T. (2008, March). Review of the literature on student teachers’ attitudes and beliefs toward students with disabilities in ability-integrated classrooms. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), New York.

*#DMundy, C. & #Kiely, M. T. (2008, November). Knowledge and practice of secondary special education teachers in a personnel preparation program. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Teacher Education Division of the Council for Exceptional Children (TED), Dallas, TX.

*#Kiely, M. T. (2007, November). Why some special educators stay in the profession: A qualitative investigation of motivations of experienced special educators to continue teaching. Paper presented at the annual conference of the Teacher Education Division (TED) of the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC), Milwaukee.

*#Kiely, M. T. (2007, June). Preparing special educators in reading instruction: The impact of state policies. Paper presented at the International Association of Special Education Biennial Conference (IASE), Hong Kong.

*#CBrownell, M. T., # CBishop, A. G. & #Kiely, M. T. (2007, April). Identifying teacher practices that promote reading achievement: Using an effective observation tool. Paper presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Louisville, KY.

*#Kiely, M. T. (2007, February.) Hand in hand: Increasing parental involvement to support struggling students in diverse, high-poverty high schools. Paper presented at the 3rd Annual Research Symposium of The Student Alliance of Graduates in Education (SAGE), Gainesville, FL. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 15

*#Kiely, M.T., #DLeko, M., #DMontoya, A., & #DKamman, M. (2006, November). Preparing special educators in reading instruction: The impact of state certification policies. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Teacher Education Division of the Council for Exceptional Children, San Diego, CA.

*DArriaza, S., DKamman, M., Kiely, M.T., # DLeko, M., & DMontoya, A. (2006, October). Preparing special educators in reading instruction: The impact of state certification policies on the nature, structure, and delivery of special education teacher certification programs. In D. Scanlon (Chair), Teacher-related and vocational issues in special education. Symposium conducted at the meeting of the World Congress on Learning Disabilities, (LDW), Burlington, MA.

(I) REPORTS N/A 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

(J) OTHER WORKS (Abstracts, editorials, extended abstracts, encyclopedia entries, posters, etc.) N/A 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion *#DBenedict, A. & #Kiely, M. T. (2014, April). Instructional decision making: A useful tool to better understand teacher learning. Poster presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Philadelphia, PA. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 16

*#DMurphy, K. & #Kiely, M. T. (2012, April). Addressing power imbalances in teacher professional development research with qualitative methods. TED Kaleidoscope. Poster presentation at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Denver, CO.

*#Kiely, M. T. (2010, April). Exploring relationships between teacher beliefs about included students with disabilities and planning. Poster session presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Nashville, TN.

*#Kiely, M. T. & #DMundy, C. (2009, April). What secondary English teachers know about teaching writing to students with disabilities. Poster session presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Seattle, WA.

*#Kiely, M. T., #DLeko, M., #DKamman, M., #DMontoya, A. (2007, April). The impact of state certification policies on special education teacher certification programs. Poster session presented at the annual Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Expo, Louisville, KY.

*#Kiely, M. T., DKamman, M., DLeko, M., & DMontoya, A. (2006, October). The influence of state policy on teacher preparation: How states’ policies and requirements for special education teachers in reading instruction affect teacher preparation programs. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Florida Council for Exceptional Children, (FCEC), Panama City, FL.

(K) SUBMITTED WORKS AND WORKS IN PROGRESS 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion 1. List works closest to completion first. 2. Describe the work in progress. Be sure to specify its magnitude and the stage of progress. 3. For any work that is under review, indicate manuscript pages, venue of review, stage of review, etc. 4. In the supporting materials include copies of all relevant written reviews, correspondence with editors, contracts, etc.

Kiely, M. T. (In progress). The relationships between secondary general education teachers’ beliefs and practices for included students with disabilities. (45 pages).

Benedict, A. E., Kiely, M. T., Park, Y., McCray, E., & Lee, A. (Under revision). Culturally responsive response to intervention: Strategies for meeting the needs of English learners. Manuscript in revision. (35 pages). Conceptualization = 25% Data Collection/Analysis = 25% Writing = 40% Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 17

Kiely, M. T. (Writing). Case studies of developing expertise in teaching students with disabilities through structured fieldwork experiences in literacy across a year-long course sequence.

Kiely, M. T. (Analyzing Data). Secondary content area teachers’ supports for students with disabilities in inclusive classes.

Kiely, M. T. (Collecting Data for a Book). Becoming a Special Education Teacher in Residency Program in New York City.

Kiely, M. T. (Planning). Improving teacher feedback on extended written responses in math, social studies, science and language arts.

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Follow the instructions above. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 18

(4) GRANTS

(A) Grants Pending N/A 1. Research Give details of pending research grants, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount requested, etc.

2. Institutional

Give details of pending grants that benefit the institution, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount requested, etc.

(B) Grants in Progress N/A 1. Research Give details of on-going research grants, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount awarded, etc.

2. Institutional

Give details of on-going grants that benefit the institution, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount awarded, etc.

(C) Grants Completed 1. Research Give details of completed research grants, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount awarded, etc. Kiely, M. T. (2016). Teachers’ understandings of writing instruction for students with disabilities included in secondary language arts classes. PSC CUNY Research Awards. $3,500. Funding period June 1-August 31, 2016. Principal Investigator.

Publication resulting from this grant: Kiely, M. T. (2018). Exemplary teachers’ understandings of writing instruction for students with disabilities included in secondary language arts classes: It’s a beautiful struggle. Exceptional Education International. 28(3), 122-141. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 19

2. Institutional

Give details of completed grants that benefited the institution, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount awarded, etc.

Gibson, L., Kiely, M. T., Dilts, A. & Ferrara, D. (2016). Project Engage: Expanding the online engagement of advanced graduate education. CUNY Queens College Center for Teaching and Learning. $20,000. Co- Principal Investigator. The purpose of Project Engage was to convert 3 post master’s programs to online format to address Queens College’s strategic goal to increase graduate enrollment. I drew on my prior experience of creating 6 online courses, teaching 9 online courses, and teaching 18 hybrid course sections to contribute to all areas of the proposal including the plan for sustainability, identifying resources and areas of need, and making decisions about the budget. I developed the childhood and adolescent assessment courses (ECPSE 702 and ECPSE 703) and I contributed to the development of the foundations course (ECPSE 700). The project enrolled its first students in Fall 2019.

Kiely, M. T. (2007). Travel grant to present original research at the International Association of Special Education conference, Hong Kong. Received May, 2007, from the University of Florida College of Education. $1200.

Presentation resulting from this grant: Kiely, M. T. (2007, June). Preparing special educators in reading instruction: The impact of state policies. Presentation at the International Association of Special Education Biennial Conference (IASE), Hong Kong.

(D) Grants Submitted, but not Funded Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 20

1. Research Give details of unsuccessful research grant applications, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount requested, etc.

Kiely, M. T. (2019). A Literature review on technology for teaching writing for students with disabilities. Submitted December 1, 2019, to PSC-CUNY Research Awards. Requested: $3,500.

Kiely, M. T.(2019). Becoming a special education teacher: A year in a teacher residency program in New York City. Submitted December 16, 2019, to CUNY Office of Research. Requested: $6,400.

Kesler, T., Kiely, M. T., Yuan, T. & Dilts, A. (2016). Developing literate lives: using reader response notebooks with students with disabilities. Submitted March 4, 2016 to CUNY Interdisciplinary Research Grant. Requested: $35,075. Co-PI.

Wiseheart, R. & Kiely, M. T. (2015). Building a better lexicon: The effects of Megawords on reading fluency and comprehension in bilingual/ELL students. Submitted February 5, 2015 to the Spencer Foundation. Requested: $50,000. Co-PI.

McKenna, J. & Kiely, M. T. (2014). Bridging the gap: Professional development for middle and secondary school teachers in evidence-based practices in literacy and behavior management for students with disabilities. Submitted September 8, 2014 to Nesta Grants. Requested: $12,085. Co-PI.

Kiely, M. T. & McKenna, J. (2014). Pull up and push forward: Supporting middle school teachers in implementing evidence-based practices in literacy for students with disabilities. Submitted April, 2014, to Mazda Education and Literacy Grants. Requested: $50,080. Co-PI.

Kiely, M. T.(2014). Iris Center Impact Study Initiative. A survey study of St. John’s University teacher graduates’ identification and use of evidence-based practices learned through the IRIS Center. Submitted March 17, 2014, to Iris Center, Peabody College, Vanderbilt University. Requested: $5,000.

Kiely, M. T. (2013). St. John’s University Summer Support for Research Grant. An investigation of multiple measures of special education teacher quality: Observation tools, cognitive interviews with teachers, and student interviews. Submitted April 1, 2013. Requested: $10,000.

Kiely, M. T. (2007). Examining teacher knowledge of writing instruction for students with disabilities included in secondary language arts classes. Submitted to the Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 21

Spencer Foundation and the National Academy of Education. Requested: $40,000.

2. Institutional

Give details of unsuccessful research grant applications that benefit the institution, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount requested, etc. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 22

(5) SERVICE

(A) COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY 1. Include the dates of each service activity. 2. Indicate if the service is compensated in any way (either with payment or with release from teaching). Queens College Service Program Level

2018-Present Member of the Graduate Program in Special Education faculty search committees: Contributed to discussions about the search process and candidates, attending meetings related to the search, attended all presentations and candidate events, participated in interviewing candidates and reviewing applicants.

2018-Present Created a form for online and in-person faculty peer observations that will be considered for adoption by the program and department.

2017-Present Member of the committee developing and implementing the Urban Residency Program and the Generalist Special Education MA residency program: Contributed to program creation, including required courses and state requirements; designed course sequences; worked with multiple stakeholders including School of Education colleagues, New Visions and NYC Department of Education; created syllabi for the 3 new residency courses with detailed assessments and rubrics; taught the Foundations and Assessment courses in the program for the 2019-2020 and 2020-2021 school years.

2016-Present Developed and maintain relationship with local United Cerebral Palsy foundation: Facilitated visits and presentations for Queens College students by UCP clients.

2016-Present Member of Special Education program subcommittee to create online programs and courses. Participated in extended professional development offered by the CTL to support our program’s capacity for providing online courses and development of online programs and courses. Worked with program sub-committee to create online programs and courses; created online courses ECPSE 702 (Childhood) and ECPSE 703 (Adolescent) Introduction to Assessment for Students with Disabilities.

2015-Present Course liaison for ECPSE 703 (Adolescent) and ECPSE 702 (Childhood) Introduction to Assessment for Students with Disabilities courses: Responsible for course development; mentoring adjuncts; and purchase, maintenance, storage and distribution of testing kits; and all accreditation materials, rubrics and data. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 23

2015-Present Course liaison for ECPSE 714 Language & Literacy: Principles & Practices in Adolescent Special Education: Responsible for developing and revising the course; incorporating online lessons; mentoring adjuncts; and all accreditation materials, rubrics and data.

2015-Present Contributed to developing ECPSE 700: Foundations of Special Education: Created quiz questions on Blackboard; updated materials; contributed to the online course and assignments.

2015-2019 Contributed to Council for Exceptional Children program accreditation preparation. I was individually responsible for data analysis and reports related to Assessment in Special Education courses.

2015-Present Attended Open Houses for student recruitment in the Special Education program.

Department Level

2019-Present Member, Committee to choose a graduation student speaker: Reviewed speaker applications and discussed candidate’s speeches; made suggestions about how to provide support to the speechwriters going forward that were incorporated into subsequent call for applications by the committee.

School of Education Level

2019-Present New York City Townsend Harris High School, Queens Consulted about professional development on Explicit Instruction for students with disabilities in the content area and consulted about research directions.

2019-Present New York City P.S./I.S. 499, Queens Member, Interface with Queens College Committee Consulted about professional development on Explicit Instruction and consulted about research and how to create meaningful data for informing instruction.

2018-Present CEEDAR partnership team member: CEEDAR is a technical assistance center for supporting students with disabilities that works towards building the capacity of state state personnel preparation systems to prepare teachers and leaders to implement evidence-based practices within multi-tiered systems of support in 18 states. The Queens College team is one of only 5 New York state participant teams. I contribute to discussions on planning our reform efforts at QC.

2016-2019 Member, Queens College Urban Teacher Residency collaboration team for exploration and program planning and Member of the Residency Research and Evaluation Team. Queens College partnered with New Visions and the New York Department of Education to prepare secondary teachers using the Urban Teacher Residency model. New Visions is a support provider funded by grants as well as Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 24

publicly and privately in public district schools spanning grade levels 6-12. In the collaboration team, my role was advisory. I participated in all program and research planning meetings, visited sites, advised on research directions and program planning, and discussed decision making, program development and program implementation. As a member of the UTR Research and Evaluation Team, I met separately and regularly with 5 division faculty on research development and explored collaboration opportunities across the division faculty.

2015-2019 Member, Queens College Unit of Education NCATE/CAEP Standard 4 Committee, for achieving professional accreditation. This standard is focused on impact. I represented the Special Education Programs and the Educational and Community Programs department in discussions on how impact can be defined and demonstrated; created plans and budgets for measuring impact; and suggested tools for measuring impact.

Queens College Level

2019-Present Member, Committee on Student Technology Fee: Reviewed and discussed proposals.

CUNY Level

2019-Present Member, Peer Mentoring Group on Conducting Research and Publishing: Joined group of faculty across CUNY in peer mentoring group to review each other’s scholarship/articles. The group continues to meet independently.

2018-2019 Participated in CUNY, Office of the Dean for Recruitment and Diversity, Faculty Fellowship Publication Program: Provided feedback and commentary on 12 peer manuscripts and participated in discussions on each manuscript; received peer feedback on my manuscripts.

St. John’s University 2014-2015 Created a study abroad course in Paris Summer 2015

2013-2015 School of Education School Policy Committee

2013-2015 Provided mentorship to new faculty

2012-2015 Faculty advisor to St. John’s University CEC Chapter

2013-2014 Contributed to organizing the St. John’s University Special Education Conference Spring 2014

2012 Reinstated dormant St. John’s University Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) chapter Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 25

2012-2015 Attended student events (e.g., St. Patrick’s Day Parade, screening of the TEACH documentary, and giftwrapping at Barnes & Noble to raise money for The Hours Children)

2012-2015 School of Education Dissertation committee member (for 3 students)

2012-2015 Volunteered for extra advising summer, winter and through email

2012-2015 Participated in faculty search and interviewed potential faculty for 2 open positions

2012-2015 Conducted independent study courses as needed in new programs

2012-2015 Attended Literacy PhD program events such as open house, meet and greet and doctoral student orientation (outside my program area)

2012-2015 Contributed to coordination of Special Education Division programs • Attended and spoke at open houses each semester at 3 campuses: Queens, Long Island and Manhattan • Wrote program review reports for 3 programs • Wrote program development report for 1 program • Interviewed potential adjuncts • Communicated with adjuncts about courses and provided guidance • Provided comprehensive exam review workshops at 4 campuses each semester • Modified program course content to increase literacy preparation • Developed online courses for Distance Learning program • Developed courses for new Adolescent Special Education program • Developed system of course sequencing within programs • Participated in curriculum mapping of topics across courses in each program and modified course content to better address state and CEC standards and essential topics in the literature • Contributed to accreditation documentation • Provided workshops for clinical associates and adjuncts each semester

University of Florida 2011-2012 Member, College of Education Long Range Planning committee.

2011-2012 Department committee on doctoral student recruitment, admissions and petitions: Initiated development of doctoral student mentorship system.

2011-2012 Member of the admissions committee that Reviewing applications of prospective doctoral students.

Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 26

(B) PROFESSION 1. Include the dates of each service activity. 2. Indicate if the service is compensated in any way (either with payment or with release from teaching).

2020-Present Communications Coordinator for NYS Federation of Chapters (NYS) of the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC): Serve as the voice of NYS CEC in social media; welcome new members and encourage participation; oversee website updates, revisions, and changes, including information provided by other officers and from other organizations; and coordinate communications with other NYS organizations, including The New York Council of Administrators of Special Education (NYCASE), the CEC Division on Career Development and Transition (DCDT), and other CEC Divisions.

2020-Present Member, Council for Exceptional Children Educators with Disabilities (CEC- EDC) Caucus: Contributed to drafting by-laws, leadership roles and committees for the new organization.

2017-Present Regional Representative for New York State Region 3, NYS Federation of Chapters (NYS) of the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC): Communicate with faculty chapter leaders, discuss vision and mission, assist with conference planning and execution, attend and contribute to executive board meetings.

2008-Present Doctoral Student Scholars Organizing Committee Co-Chair, Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Division for Research (DR): Coordinate the cohorts of DR’s Doctoral Student Scholars, including the call for proposals, review process, seminar series, and colloquium at CEC; select and communicate with seminar presenters, reviewers, and participants; manage materials and create forms and emails; and manage the online discussions.

2015, April. Chair of roundtable at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), Washington, DC: Examinations of Disciplinary Literacy & Writing Practices. Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 27

2015, April. Chair of roundtable at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), Washington, DC: Models for Promoting Inquiry and Collaborative Learning for Veteran, Novice, and Preservice Teachers.

2014, April. Chair of roundtable at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (AERA), Philadelphia, PA: Issues in collaborative teaching and inclusion.

2007-2011 Student Representative to the Executive Board, Council for Exceptional Children’s (CEC) Division for Research (DR): Processed proposal submissions and coordinated the review process for DR for the 2009 CEC conference; Assisted with organizing DR’s strand for the 2009 CEC conference; Researched how DR might better serve the needs of doctoral students and initiated 2 programs, the Scholars and the student awards, to address them; Coordinated the cohorts of DR’s Doctoral Student Scholars, including the call for proposals, the review process, the seminar series, and the colloquium at CEC 2009-2011; Contributed to the creation of DR’s dissertation award; Represented DR at CEC’s General Assembly (2007- 2008)

2009 Member of Council for Exceptional Children, Division of Public Policy: Coordinated review process for Public Policy division

2007 Crockett, J., Gerber, M., & Landrum, T. (2007). Achieving the radical reform of special education: Essays in honor of James M. Kauffman. Routledge: Mahwah, NJ: Compiled the author index and assisted with subject index

2006 Center on Personnel Studies in Special Education (COPSSE; OSEP) Guest editor for online publication

Reviewed submissions for the following conferences/publications:

2005-Present American Educational Research Association (AERA) • Division K, Teacher Education: Teacher Professional Development • Division K, Teacher Education: Teacher Education Program Design and Innovations • Division K, Teacher Education: Focus on the Lives of Teachers • Special Education SIG

2005- Present Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Convention and Conferences • Teacher Education Division (TED) of CEC • Division for Research (DR) of CEC Mary Theresa Kiely, ECPSE June-2020; Page 28

2015-2017 World Education Research Association (WERA)

2005-2009 Student Association for Graduate Education (SAGE)

2008 National Reading Council (NRC) Yearbook

(C) COMMUNITY 1. Include service activities from the last five years only. 2. Include dates of each service activity. Examples: unpaid board memberships for schools, libraries, other non-profits; activities in non-college or university settings; unpaid consultantships.

2012- Present New York City and vicinity schools Consulted with individual principals and teachers as requested or referred; established partnerships for providing professional development; and made presentations on effective practices at local conferences.

2014, 8/26-27 Writing coach for St. John’s University Academic Service Learning’s Cristo Rey Brooklyn High School Writing Workshop

2005-2012 Alachua, Clay and Duval County Schools, Florida Worked directly with teachers and students to enhance student learning through the work for various projects and grants; made research accessible to practitioners by facilitating the preparation of presentations on effective instruction in reading to practitioners at local and state conferences.

Board of Trustees of The City University of New York

RESOLUTION TO Award Maaza Mengiste with Early Tenure at Queens College with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2)

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, Maaza Mengiste, MFA, is a published novelist who joined Queens College as a tenure track assistant professor of creative writing in 2015, following three years as a visiting assistant professor in our MFA program, as well as visiting positions at NYU, Princeton and Northwestern; and

WHEREAS, When Professor Mengiste joined the Queens College faculty, she had already published a well-regarded first novel, Beneath the Lion’s Gaze, published by WW Norton, in 2010, and her second novel has won wide acclaim, including short listing for the Booker Prize; and

WHEREAS, Based on her previous experience and her record of publications, Professor Mengiste was offered the possibility of early tenure consideration at the time of her tenure track hire, and her record since then has more than fulfilled that promise; and

WHEREAS, Professor Mengiste teaches a wide range of literature and creative writing courses, from the introductory creative writing workshop to the MFA fiction workshop and while she was hired primarily to teach creative writing at the undergraduate and graduate levels in the department, her knowledge of African literature and history, partly stemming from the extensive research that she has done to support her fiction writing, also allowed Queens College to once again teach African literature on a regular basis; and

WHEREAS, Since her hire at Queens College, Professor. Mengiste has published ten essays in journals and magazines, five essays in anthologies, and edited an anthology of fiction, Addis Ababa Noir. Her second novel, The Shadow King, published by WW Norton, was short-listed for the Booker Prize, an exceptional honor for any writer, but particularly notable for an untenured assistant professor; and WHEREAS, the American Academy of Arts & Letters awarded Professor Mengiste its literature prize, which honors exceptional accomplishment in any genre; and

WHEREAS, Professor Mengiste enthusiastically participates in the life of the department and the MFA program, serving for several years as the Assistant Director of the MFA program, supervising numerous student theses, and has serving as a member of the ad hoc committee to develop a Writing Minor for the department as well as serving on the Strategic Plan Implementation Committee and working on the department’s long-running Evening Reading series; and

WHEREAS, Professor. Mengiste also has a distinguished record of public service outside Queens College, serving on the board of Words Without Borders, an online international journal that publishes translated literature, the board of another online journal, Warscapes, which publishes literature written by residents of war-torn countries, and she also works closely with the Young Center for Immigrant Children’s Rights, an organization that advocates for the legal rights of unaccompanied minor immigrant children and their wellbeing.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

RESOLVED, That Prof. Maaza Mengiste be awarded early tenure in the Department of English at Queens College, effective September 1, 2021 with an application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2), subject to financial ability.

EXPLANATION: In her time at the Queens College, Professor. Mengiste has exceeded expectations in scholarship, teaching, and service while contributing to the development of new approaches to the study of her discipline, while garnering a national and international reputation for her work and publications. Therefore, Queens College should make every effort to retain her before she is lost to a competing institution. Queens College Curriculum Vitae: Professorial Titles Revised 9/16/2020

1. Please make sure you are using the correct CV form. This form is for faculty in professorial titles only. (There are separate forms for Lecturers and College Laboratory Technicians.) 2. Please read all instructions carefully. 3. Throughout this document, headings are in Bold. Enter information in normal font. 4. In all categories, list items in reverse chronological order (so, most recent first). 5. Do not delete any categories. (Insert N/A if you have nothing to list in a given category.) 6. All boxes and cells will expand as you add information. The instructions within each box or cell may be deleted.

BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION

NAME: Maaza Mengiste

COLLEGE: Queens College

HIGHER EDUCATION A. Degrees (most recent first) Institution Dates Attended Degree/Major Date Conferred NYU 2004-07 MFA Creative May 2007 Writing/Fiction University of 1989-1993 B.A., English May 1993 Michigan – Ann Arbor

B. Additional Higher Education and/or Education in Progress Institution Dates Attended Courses, etc.

Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 2

EXPERIENCE A. Teaching (include part- and full-time experience at Queens College, most recent first) Institution Dates Rank Department Queens College 2015-Present Assistant Professor, English Creative Writing Queens College 2012-2015 Visiting Assistant English Professor Northwestern UniversitySpring 2015 Visiting Writer Center for Writing Arts Princeton University 2013-2014 Lecturer Creative Writing New York University 2005-2011 Language Lecturer Expository Writing

B. Other Than Teaching (include experience at Queens College, most recent first) Institution Dates Rank/Title

RECORD OF APPOINTMENT IN EACH TITLE AT QUEENS COLLEGE (most recent first; include date of tenure, if awarded) Dates Rank September 2015 Assistant Professor September 2012 Visiting Assistant Professor

ACADEMIC AND PROFESSIONAL HONORS Date Honor 2020 Booker Prize Shortlist 2020 Civitella Ranieri Fellowship 2020 American Academy of Arts & Letters Award - Literature 2020 LA Times Book Prize Finalist – Fiction 2020 LiteraturHaus Zurich Fellowship 2019 The Bridge Award/Premio il ponte 2019 New York Times 100 Notable Books of the Year 2019 NPR Favorite Books of 2019 Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 3

2019 TIME Magazine 100 Must-Read Books of 2019 2019 Creative Capital Award 2018 National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship 2018 Waterlines Project Fellowship 2017 Santa Maddalena Foundation Fellowship 2013 Puterbaugh Fellowship 2011 Dayton Literary Peace Prize, Runner-Up 2010 Fulbright Fellowship 2010 Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Prize, Finalist 2010 NAACP Image Award Finalist, Literary Debut

MEMBERSHIP IN PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES (last five years only)

(2) TEACHING

1. List all courses that you have taught in the previous four semesters (whether at Queens College or at the Graduate Center). For each course listed here, upload your syllabus and at least one example of student work. (Student work should be anonymous but the grade given should be noted.) Feel free to upload anything else you feel is relevant. 2. In addition, list all student mentoring—whether it be undergraduate independent studies or graduate thesis/dissertation supervision, at Queens or at the Graduate Center. (Note that the College will provide official information on your complete workload as well as the content of your student evaluations; you do not have to do this.)

Semester Description 1. Give course numbers and titles. As instructed above, upload syllabi and at least one example of student work for each course listed here. 2. List most recent courses first. (NOTE: I was on a Scholar Incentive Fellowship for Fall 2019-Spring 2020; I was on Reassigned Time for Fall 2017) Spr 2019 ENGL 355 African American Literature II ENGL 751 Workshop in Fiction Fall 2018 ENGL 364 African Literature & Culture ENGL 681 Special Studies (MA/MFA Seminar) Spr 2018 ENGL 751 Workshop in Fiction Reassigned Time Fall 2017 Reassigned Time Spr 2017 ENGL 781 Special Seminars (MA/MFA Seminar) Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 4

ENGL 301W Fiction Workshop ENGL 210W Intro Creative Writing

(3) SCHOLARSHIP AND CREATIVE WORK

1. For all published work, give complete bibliographic entries including total page numbers. Except for works listed in section (K), all works listed should be in their final form, published or in final proofs. Everything else should be listed in section (K) Submitted Works and Works in Progress, annotated with a description of the specific stage of the work. 2. For any work published on-line, give active links as well as word counts. 3. All exhibitions or performances that have occurred or are occurring right now should be listed in section (E). Include as much detail as you can, e.g. title, nature of work, venue, group or solo work, dates, attendance, etc. Works that are planned should be listed in section (K). 4. For collaborative work (written or performance-based), indicate the percentage of work and the nature of that work done by the candidate, e.g. conceptual, editing, the actual writing, the actual performance, etc. In addition, for collaborative work, indicate the role of each contributor using the following superscripts: H=high school student; U=undergraduate student; M=master’s student; D=doctoral student; PD=post- doctoral research fellow; CQ= Queens College faculty collaborator and staff; C=col- laborator (student or faculty, work conducted at another institution). 5. In all cases, list most recent works first (the boxes will expand as you add information). 6. Note additional instructions on how to notate work that is refereed, invited, etc.

(A) BOOKS and other MONOGRAPHS 1. Published since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion -Addis Ababa Noir, Akashic Books, August 2020.

-The Shadow King, W.W. Norton, September 2019.

2. Published prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

-Beneath the Lion’s Gaze, W.W. Norton, January 2010.

(B) JOURNAL ARTICLES 1. Published since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 5

Indicate refereed articles with an asterisk (*).

“Books that Made Me,” Guardian, August 21, 2020, 250 words.

“Il compleanno (The Birthday),” Vogue Italia, July/August 2020. 200 words.

“Four Cities: Addis Ababa,” Vanity Fair UK, February 2020. 800 words.

“From Homer to Alexievich: Top 10 Books About the Human Cost of War,” Guardian, January 29, 2020. 800 words.

“Writing About the Forgotten Black Women of the Italo-Ethiopian War,” LitHub, September 24, 2019. 2500 words.

“In Ethiopia’s Highlands, a Search for Hope and Horror,” Wall Street Journal, August 20, 2019. 800 words.

“This is What the Journey Does,” New York Review of Books, April 17, 2018. 2000 words.

“A Dangerous Nostalgia: A Conversation between Maaza Mengiste and Eric Gottesman,” SPOT Magazine (Interview, Journal of the Houston Center for Photography), February 2018. 2000 words.

“El cuerpo del migrante,” La biblioteca, (Literary Essay, Journal of the National Library, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Ed. Alberto Manguel) December 2017. 1200 words.

“Why Donald Trump Couldn’t Let Ghazala Khan Grieve in Silence,” Cosmopolitan (Editorial), August 3, 2016. 1200 words.

“Bending History,” Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art, Duke University Press. Winter 2016. 1300 words.

“Unheard-of Things,” The Massachusetts Review, (Literary Essay) Spring 2016. 1400 words

2. Published prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Indicate refereed articles with an asterisk (*).

Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 6

(C) CHAPTERS IN BOOKS/ANTHOLOGIES 1. Published since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Indicate refereed chapters with an asterisk (*).

“A Different Lens,” Women and Migration: Responses in Art and History, Eds. Deb Willis, Ellyn Toscano, Kalia Brooks Nelson, Open Book Publisher, March 2019. 2000 words.

“This is What the Journey Does,” The Displaced: Refugee Writers on Refugee Lives, Ed. Viet Thanh Nguyen, Abrams Press, April 2018. 2000 words.

“On Illusion and the Ordinary,” Everyday Africa: 30 Photographers Re- Imagining a Continent (a photobook), Eds. Austin Merrill, Peter DiCampo, Nana Kofi Acquah, Kehrer Verlag Publishing, June 2017. 2600 words.

“The Stranger’s Notebook: Migration & the Art of Dawit L. Petros,” Recent Histories: Contemporary African Photography and Video Art (exhibit catalogue), Eds. Daniela Baumann, Joshua Chuang, Oluremi C. Onabanjo, The Walter Collection/Steidl Publishing. May 2017. 2100 words.

2. Published prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Indicate refereed chapters with an asterisk (*). “A Good Soldier,” The Granta Book of the African Short Story, Ed. Helon Habila, Granta Books. September 2011. 4200 words.

(D) ARTICLES IN CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS (full articles only) 1. Published since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion 1. Include only full articles based on conference talks. 2. Indicate refereed presentations with an asterisk (*). Indicate invited presentations with a double asterisk (**). 3. For collaborative work, indicate the presenting author with a hashtag (#). 4. Entries listed here should not be repeated in section (H) Oral Presentations, below.

2. Published prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Follow the instructions above. Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 7

(E) EXHIBITIONS/PERFORMANCES 1. Took place since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Note that reviews of work, specifically, are listed in Section (G) below and do not have to be included here.

Group Exhibition, Closets: Reimagining Identities While Embracing Memories, NYU Tisch Gulf + Western Gallery, New York City, NY. October 2 – December 20, 2019. Group exhibit featured twenty-four artists, including me. I exhibited fifteen photographs from my personal collection curated by me to speak to the theme of the show. (Co-curators: Deb Willis, PhD and Kalia Brooks Nelson, PhD)

Solo Exhibition, Into Brighter Light: Photographs of the 1935 Italo-Ethiopian War, Center for Fiction, Brooklyn, NY. September 24 – Dec 15, 2019. Exhibit featured twenty photos from my personal collection. (Curator: Maaza Mengiste)

2. Took place prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Follow the instructions above.

(F) REVIEWS (by the candidate, of others’ performances or scholarly works) 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Review of Abdulrazak Gurnah’s Afterlives, Guardian, October 2020 (pending). 800 words.

“Faith and Fury,” Review of Yaa Gyasi’s Transcendent Kingdom, Boston Globe, September 6, 2020. 900 words.

“A Dark City,” Review of Hamid Ismailov’s Underground, The New Inquiry, December 1, 2015. 2600 words.

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion “Between Pain and Peace,” Review of Aminatta Forna’s Memory of Love, New Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 8

York Times Book Review, January 7, 2011. 1200 words.

(G) REVIEWS (by others, of the candidate’s performances or scholarly works) 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

“How Women Helped Fight Il Duce’s Italy,” The Metro, February 27, 2020.

“‘The Shadow King’ Tells the Story of the Female Soldiers Written Out of African History,” The National UAE, February 7, 2020.

“Maaza Mengiste’s Second Novel Brings a Forgotten Chapter in World History to Light”, The List, January 30, 2020.

“Fiction Review: The Shadow King,” Guardian, January 18, 2020.

“War, Women, Survival,” The Times, January 15, 2020.

“Maaza Mengiste Sings a Modern Song of War,” New York Times, September 26, 2019.

“‘The Shadow King’ is a Gorgeous Meditation on Memory, War and Violence,” NPR, September 25, 2019.

“The Forgotten Women Warriors of Abyssinia,” Wall Street Journal, September 20, 2019.

“The Shadow King,” starred review, Booklist, August 1, 2019.

“The Shadow King,” starred review, Library Journal, August 1, 2019.

“The Shadow King,” starred review, Publishers Weekly, July 10, 2019.

“The Shadow King,” Kirkus Reviews, July 1, 2019.

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion “Battle Scars,” , December 31, 2009.

Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 9

“Death in the Family,” Bookforum, December/January 2010.

“Ten Cultural Resolutions for 2010,” Vogue, Dec 2009.

“Briefly Noted: Beneath the Lion’s Gaze,” The New Yorker, Feb 8, 2010.

“In Ethiopia, a Monarch Falls in ‘Beneath the Lion’s Gaze’,” NPR Books, Feb 13, 2010.

“Beneath the Lion’s Gaze,” Christian Science Monitor, Geoff Wisner, Mar 2010.

“Beneath the Lion’s Gaze,” , Aida Edemariam, Apr 23, 2010.

(H) ORAL PRESENTATIONS, ADDRESSES, AND MASTER CLASSES 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion 1. Indicate refereed presentations with an asterisk (*). Indicate invited presentations with a double asterisk (**). 2. For collaborative work, indicate the presenting author with a hashtag (#). 3. Entries listed in section (D) should not be repeated here.

(ALL INVITED) British Library, London, March 3, 2020.

Ethiopian Embassy, London, 28 January 2020.

FILO Oaxaca Book Festival, Mexico, October 21, 2019.

NYU Master Class, New York campus, October 10, 2019.

New York University, Paris campus, July 14, 2019.

Displacements, The Jungian Psychoanalytic Association, February 2, 2019.

Amherst Books Talk, Amherst College, September 26, 2017.

Through a Different Lens, University of Pittsburgh, February 16, 2017.

Salman Rushdie and Maaza Mengiste, Albertine Books, NYC, October 27, 2016.

James Foley Symposium, Amherst, MA, September 19 – 20, 2016.

Disquiet Literary Program Presents: Angolan-Portuguese Writers José Eduardo Agualusa and Djaimilia Almeida in conversation with Maaza Mengiste, Lisbon, Portugal, July 7, 2016. Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 10

After the Holocaust-Primo Levi and the Nexus of Science, Responsibility and Humanism, United Nations - NYC, May 4, 2016.

Ninety Minutes, Three Minds, PEN World Voices Festival NYC, April 29, 2016. Country of Nowhere: The Refugee Crisis, PEN World Voices Festival NYC, April 26, 2016.

New Literature from Europe Festival: The Call: Writing with Responsibility, NYC, December 3, 2015.

Aké Arts and Book Festival, Abeokuta, Nigeria, November 17-21, 2015.

Forty Years After: Chinue Achebe and Africa in the Global Imagination, Amherst, MA, October 14 – 15, 2015.

Africa Utopia: Migrations of the Mind, Southbank Centre, London, September 13, 2015.

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Follow the instructions above.

(ALL INVITED) A Night of Poetry and Fiction, Oxford University TORCH, July 14, 2015.

Literary Maps of Colonialism. Berlin, Germany. January 25, 2015.

Writers Unlimited Winternachten Festival. The Hague, Netherlands. Jan 15-18, 2015.

Leukerbad International Literature Festival. Leukerbad, Switzerland. July 3-5, 2014.

ZEE Jaipur Literature Festival. Jaipur, India. January 17-21, 2014.

Conversations with African Poets & Writers. Library of Congress. Washington, DC. March 21, 2013.

(I) REPORTS 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 11

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion

(J) OTHER WORKS (Abstracts, editorials, extended abstracts, encyclopedia entries, posters, etc.) 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Kakuma: The Invisible City, Film Co-writer, Cassette for Timescapes Production Company, 2016.

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Girl Rising: Azmera, Segment Writer, The Documentary Group/10x10 Films Production Company, 2013.

(K) SUBMITTED WORKS AND WORKS IN PROGRESS 1. Since most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion 1. List works closest to completion first. 2. Describe the work in progress. Be sure to specify its magnitude and the stage of progress. 3. For any work that is under review, indicate manuscript pages, venue of review, stage of review, etc. 4. In the supporting materials include copies of all relevant written reviews, correspondence with editors, contracts, etc.

Works in Progress -A Brief Portrait of Small Deaths I won a 2019 Creative Capital grant to research and write my third novel. This project is in the early research stages. The novel will be set during the interwar years in Berlin, as Nazism is rising.

2. Prior to most recent of: initial appointment or last promotion Follow the instructions above.

Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 12

(4) GRANTS

(A) Grants Pending 1. Research Give details of pending research grants, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount requested, etc. N/A

2. Institutional

Give details of pending grants that benefit the institution, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount requested, etc. N/A

(B) Grants in Progress 1. Research Give details of on-going research grants, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount awarded, etc.

“A Brief Portrait of Small Deaths,” (third novel); Maaza Mengiste, Creative Capital Awards, Jan – Dec 2019; sole Principle Investigator; applied for up to $50,000 to conduct research for the third novel. -This grant is ongoing for the duration of my project. I have been awarded up to $50,000, depending on the needs of this third novel. I was awarded $10,000 initially. I have asked for $5,000 more, based on an updated budget and an explanation of funding distribution. I am able to ask for up to a total of $50,000.

2. Institutional

Give details of on-going grants that benefit the institution, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount awarded, etc.

(C) Grants Completed 1. Research Give details of completed research grants, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount awarded, etc.

“A Brief Portrait of Small Deaths,” (third novel); Maaza Mengiste, National Endowment for the Arts, Jan – Dec 2018; sole Principle Investigator; $25,000 to conduct research for this third book. Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 13

“The Shadow King,” (second novel); Faculty Fellowship Publication Program, Queens College CUNY; Jan - May 2018; sole Principle Investigator; 1 course release to attend faculty workshops and receive feedback on this novel.

2. Institutional

Give details of completed grants that benefited the institution, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount awarded, etc.

(D) Grants Submitted, but not Funded 1. Research Give details of unsuccessful research grant applications, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount requested, etc.

2. Institutional

Give details of unsuccessful research grant applications that benefit the institution, e.g. title, purpose, funding agency, candidate’s role, amount requested, etc.

(5) SERVICE

(A) COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY 1. Include the dates of each service activity. 2. Indicate if the service is compensated in any way (either with payment or with release from teaching). -Assistant Director, MFA Program: 1 course release per year (2017-Present) As an AD of the MFA Program, I assist the director, Nicole Cooley, with various aspects of recruitment, the most important of which is extending the program’s outreach and updating our marketing materials, including the program website. I also help gather names of prospective candidates for our Visiting Writer position, and I supervise the MFA journal, Armstrong Literary. In addition, I am available for our MFA students to meet on Thursday afternoons.

-MFA Committee (2012-Present) As a member of this committee, I take an active role in planning, implementing, Candidate’s Name Sep-2020; Page 14

and attending MFA events such as readings and lectures. I serve as a Thesis Advisor across all the genres that we teach. I read applications, answer candidate questions, and help make decisions on fiction candidates. I assist in activities that strengthen and develop the MFA program.

-Writing Committee (Fall 2018, Fall 2020) I am part of the committee designing a new Writing minor for the program. We focused on new and existing courses that could fulfill Minor requirements. Chaired by Karen Weingarten.

-Co-Curator, Evening Readings (Spring 2018) I helped Jeffrey Rosenstock and Julia Delpalacio with the overall planning of the Evening Series. Working with budget and scheduling challenges, we were able to develop a season of events. I organized two of the readings and was able to bring award-winning writer, Valeria Luiselli, to campus for a March 6 reading. The next event was an MFA Faculty.

-Strategic Plan Implementation Group 2 (Fall 2016 - Spring 2017) I was on the team focused on supporting faculty and staff excellence, and it was chaired by Provost Betsy Hendrey.

(B) PROFESSION 1. Include the dates of each service activity. 2. Indicate if the service is compensated in any way (either with payment or with release from teaching).

-Words Without Borders, Advisory Board (2014-Present) Words Without Borders is an international magazine that promotes cultural understanding through the translation, publication, and promotion of contemporary international literature.

-Warscapes, Advisory Board (2013-Present) Warscapes is an independent online magazine that provides a lens into current conflicts across the world

-Young Center for Immigrant Children’s Rights (Affiliated, former Board Member 2012-2017) The Young Center for Immigrant Children’s Rights is an organization that advocates for the legal protection of unaccompanied immigrant children, and provides services to ensure their well-being.

(C) COMMUNITY 1. Include service activities from the last five years only. 2. Include dates of each service activity. Examples: unpaid board memberships for schools, libraries, other non-profits; activities in non-college or university settings; unpaid consultantships.

Board of Trustees of The City University of New York

RESOLUTION TO Award Christian Parenti with Early Tenure at John Jay College of Criminal Justice with an Application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2)

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, Dr. Christian Parenti is a valuable and productive member of the Economics Department providing it with much needed expertise in his teaching, strong service, and a dramatically increased Economics department research profile; and

WHEREAS, Prior to joining John Jay College in 2017, Dr. Parenti was already an important public intellectual with wide appeal and name recognition; and

WHEREAS, Trained as a political geographer and highly regarded as a public intellectual, Dr. Parenti has written four well-received books with topics ranging from incarceration to sustainability as well as peer-reviewed journal articles and numerous other publications with his books being used in John Jay Economics and Criminal Justice classes long before he joined the faculty; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Parenti’s fifth book, Radical Hamilton, about Hamilton’s economics, is already considered be an important contribution to both U.S. economic history and development economics, with one exetrnal reviewer stating that the book is “wide ranging, carefully researched, and forcefully written. It recovers a national founder with a cogent vision of economic development through federal action. Shredding the myth of the unregulated market, Christian Parenti finds the historical foundation for contemporary efforts to craft an economy that better serves most Americans”; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Parenti is considered an excellent department member and is dedicated to service for the department, college, and larger profession, currently serving as an elected representative on the Faculty Senate and College Council, a member of the Economics Department Personnel and Budget Committee for the past two years, and previously serving on the Department’s Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, the Grade Appeals Committee, and

WHEREAS, Dr. Parenti is an important member of the Economics Department master’s faculty where he mentors students and supervised multiple independent studies; and

WHEREAS, In his three years since coming to John Jay, Dr. Parenti has taught eight different courses, which is a testament to his flexibility and his willingness to work with students and his approach to teaching has enabled the department to serve some students in a very deep way that has heretofore been missing.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

RESOLVED, That Dr. Christian Parenti be awarded early tenure in the Department of Economics at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, effective September 1, 2021 with an application of Bylaw 6.2.c(2), subject to financial ability.

EXPLANATION: Dr. Christian Parenti’s scholarly productivity, teaching and service exceed the high standards for early tenure. He is a nationally respected scholar and public intellectual whose publications have already had significant impact on his discipline. Therefore, John Jay College should make every effort to retain him before he is lost to a competing institution. CHRISTIAN PARENTI, Ph.D Associate Professor Department of Economics John Jay College CUNY 524 West 59th Street New York, NY 10019 [email protected]

EDUCATION

2000 PhD Sociology, co-supervised in Geography, London School of Economics

1994 BA Interdisciplinary Social Science, New School for Social Research

Teaching and Research Fields: political economy, state power, economic history, environmental history, climate change, sustainable energy, American history, warfare, and political violence.

ACADEMIC POSTS

2117-present Associate Professor, Economics, John Jay College, CUNY 2014-2017 Lecturer, Global Liberal Studies program, New York University 2002-2010 Visiting Scholar, Center for Place, Culture and Politics, City University of New York Graduate Center 2012-2014 Professor of Sustainable Development, and Director, Climate Change, Food and Energy Program, School for International Training 2011 Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Brooklyn College 2003-2010 Post Doctorates, Center for Place Culture and Politics, CUNY 1997-2002 Assistant Professor, Humanities Program, New College of California 1998-2000 Adjunct professor department of Sociology Anthropology St. Mary’s College, Moraga California

BOOKS

2020 Radical Hamilton: Economic Lessons from a Misunderstood Founder Verso, August 2020

2011 Tropic of Chaos: Climate Change and the New Geography of Violence New York: Nation Books

Prize: Santa Monica Public Library, Green Prize For Sustainable Literature 2012 ] ,[Knowledge of World Series] اﻟﻤﻌﺮﻓﺔ ﻋﺎﻟﻢ ﺳﻠﺴﻠﺔ Translated into Arabic National Council for Culture, Arts andاﻟﻤﺠﻠﺲ اﻟﻮﻃﻨﻲ ﻟﻠﺜﻘﺎﻓﺔ واﻟﻔﻨﻮن واﻵداب Letters] 2014 Audiobook by Audible narrated by Vikas Adam.

2004 The Freedom: Shadows and Hallucinations in Occupied Iraq New York: The New Press 2003 The Soft Cage: Surveillance from to the War on Terror New York: Basic Books

1999/2008 Lockdown America: Police and Prisons in the Age of Crisis New York: Verso (second revised edition, 2008)

Books in progress: Storm Socialism and the Power of the Sun South, North, and West: An Economic and Environmental History of The United States

ARTICLES (*indicates peer-reviewed)

2015* “The Environment Making State: Territory, Nature, Value,” Antipode 47(4), 829- 848.

2015* “Flower of War: An Environmental History of Opium Poppy in Afghanistan,” SAIS Review of International Affairs 35 (1): 183-200.

2008* “Afghanistan: Uses and Abuses of a Buffer State,” New Political Science, 30(1), 89- 101.

2003 “Back to the Motherland: Cuba in Africa,” Monthly Review, 55 (2), 52-58.

2001* “America’s Jihad: A History of Origins,” Social Justice, 28 (3), 31-38.

2001 “The ‘New’ Criminal Justice, 1968 to 2001,” Monthly Review, 53(3), 19-28.

2000* “Crime As Social Control,” Social Justice, 27(3), 43-50.

1998* “Postmodern Maroon in the Ultimate Palenque,” Peace Review, 10 (3), 419-426.

BOOK CHAPTERS

2020 Book Chapter, “Climate in the Age of Neoliberalism,” Michael Boyden, (ed.), Themes in American Literature and Culture, Cambridge University Press.

2020 Book Chapter, “A Left Defense of Carbon Dioxide Removal: the state must be forced to deploy civilization saving technology,” in J.P. Sapinski, Holly Jean Buck and Andreas Malm, (ed.s), Has it Come to This? The Promises and Pitfalls of Geoengineering, Rutgers University Press.

2020 Book Chapter “Maximalist Elites and The Ecological Burden of Southern History,” in Michael Sorkin and Daniel Monk, (ed.s) Catastrophe and Revolution: Essays for Mike Davis, Terreform/Urban Research Press.

2017 “Climate Change and Conflict" in Paul Joseph (ed.) The SAGE Encyclopedia of War: Social Science Perspectives, SAGE Publications, Thousand Oaks, CA.

2 2016 “Environment-Making in the Capitalocene Political Ecology of the State,” in Jason W. Moore, (ed.), Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Nature, History, and the Crisis of Capitalism. Oakland: PM Press, 166-185.

2016 “The Catastrophic Convergence: Militarism Neoliberalism and Climate Change,” in Nick Buxton and Ben Hayes, (ed.s), The Secure in The Dispossessed: How the Military and Corporations are Shaping a Climate Changed World. London: Pluto, 23-39.

2013 “This is Your Mind on Lockdown,” in Anthony J. Nocella II and David Gabbard, (ed.s) Policing the Campus: Academic Repression, Surveillance, and the Occupy Movement. New York: Peter Lang, xi-xiii.

2007 “Planet America: The Revolution in Military Affairs as Fantasy and Fetish,” in Ashley Dawson and Malini Johar, (ed.s), Exceptional State. Durum: Duke University Press, 88- 104.

2006 “The Big Easy Dies Hard,” in, Betsy Reed, (ed.), Unnatural Disasters, New York: Nation Books, 7-13.

2006 “New Orleans: Raze or Rebuild?” in, Betsy Reed, (ed.), Unnatural Disasters, New York: Nation Books, 153-161.

2006 “Afghanistan: The Other War,” in Royce Flippin, (ed.), Best American Political Writing of 2006, New York: Avalon, 287-297.

2004 “Lied to, Stretch Thin and Mistreated,” in Mark LeVine and Viggo Mortensen, (ed.s), Twilight of Empire: Responses to Occupation, 101-107.

2003 “Bring Us Your Chained and Huddled Masses,” in Thomas Frank, (ed.), Boob Jubilee: More Salvos From the Baffler, New York: Norton, 51-60.

2003 “Us Against Them in the Me Decade,” in Thomas Frank, (ed.), Boob Jubilee: More Salvos From the Baffler, New York: Norton, 328–340.

2003 “Deadly Nostalgia: The Politics of Boot Camps,” in Tara Herivel and Paul Wright, (ed.s), Prison Nation, New York: Routledge, 85-92.

2002 “American Jihad,” in Phil Scraton, (ed.), Beyond September 11, London: Pluto, 10-19.

2002 “Satellites of Sorrow: Prison in the Circuitry of Social Control,” Deepak Sawhney, (ed.), Unmasking LA, New York: Saint Martin’s, 47-66.

2002 “State Repression,” Joy James, (ed.), States of Confinement: Policing, Detention, and Prisons, New York: Palgrave, 303-311.

2001 “Colony Kosovo,” in, Russ Kick, (ed.), You Are Being Lied To, New York: Disinformation Books, 111-113.

2001 “Rehabilitating Prison Labor: The Uses of Imprisoned Masculinity,” Terry Kupers, (ed.), Prison Masculinities, Philadelphia: Temple, 247-254.

3 ESSAYS

2020 “The Surprising Geography of Police Killings: Back-of-the-Napkin Calculations on Race, Region, and Violence,” Nonsite, July 9, 2020

2020 “Our Economy Is a Sick Beast: The Corporate Debt Crisis Explained,” Jacobin, March 28, w/ Dante Dallavalle.

2020 “Wall Street Is High on Government Supply,” Jacobin, March 9, w/ Dante Dallavalle.

2020 “Impeachment Without Class Politics: An Autopsy” Jacobin, January 9.

2019 “Saving the Planet Without Self-Loathing,” Jacobin, October 3.

2019 “The Limits of ‘Experiencing’ the Climate Crisis,” Jacobin, August 23.

2019 “Make Corporations Pay for the Green New Deal,” Jacobin, March 13.

2017 “If We Fail,” Jacobin, August 29.

2017 “Free Speech as Battleground,” Jacobin, April 1.

2017 “Trump’s ‘Hard Power’ Budget,” Jacobin, February 18.

2016 “Listening to Trump,” Jacobin, November 22.

2016 “Garbage In, Garbage Out: Clinton's ground game sucked,” Jacobin, November 11.

2016 “The Next Refugee Crisis,” Jacobin, January 26.

2015 “Farmer suicides, Naxal violence and climate change,” Times of India, December 2.

2015 “Why the State Matters,” Jacobin, October 30.

2015 “The Making of the American Police State,” Jacobin, July 28.

2014 “Reading Hamilton from the Left,” Jacobin, August 26.

2014 “Rethinking the State: Shadow Socialism in the Age of Environmental Crisis,” New Politics, Winter.

2013 “A Radical Approach to Climate Change,” Dissent, Summer.

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS

2020 “Climate Change and Our Toxic Coasts,” keynote at, Climates of Crisis: life, power, and Planetary Justice, World-Ecology Research Network, SUNY Binghamton, February 7-8.

2019 “Necrotic Elites, or Whatever Happened to the Ruling Class?” plenary at Planetary Utopias, Capitalist Dystopias: Justice, Nature & the Liberation of Life, Fifth Annual 4 Conference World-Ecology Research Network, California Institute of Integral Studies, San Francisco, May 30-31, June 1, 2019.

2015 “Surveillance and Its Connection to Larger Social Issues,” plenary at Exposed: Privacy, Security and the Smart City Conference at IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law, November 6.

2015 “Is Green Developmentalism Possible?” Invited paper for workshop, From the Streets to The State, Department of Political Science, York University, Toronto, October 30.

2015 “Nature, Numbers, and Developmentalism: The Environment Making State in Early America,” Featured Speaker, Ecologically Unequal Exchange: Environmental Injustice in Comparative and Historical Perspective, Conference at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, October 15-16.

2015 “Capitalism, The Environment-Making State, and The Question of Ecological Limits,” plenary, at the World Society, Planetary Natures Crisis and Sustainability in the Capitalocene and Beyond conference, SUNY Binghamton University, July 9-11.

2015 “Lockdown America in retrospect: why the political economy of criminal justice still matters,” plenary, Socialism 2015 conference, Chicago, Illinois, July 3.

2013 “The Political Economy of Climate Change,” keynote, Union of Radical Political Economists, conference “Political Economy of the Environment,” October 5, 2013 at St. Francis College, Brooklyn.

2013 “A Political Economic Assessment of the US invasion of Iraq, a decade later” keynote lecture, annual convention of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW), Chicago, July 2.

2013 “A Radical Approach to Dealing with Climate Change,” plenary, Left Forum, Pace University, New York City, July 5.

2013 “The Environmental State: Territoriality, Violence, and Value,” The 2013 Antipode AAG Lecture at the American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, CA., April, 10.

2013 “War and Climate Crisis,” keynote at “Will the World of 2050 Be Livable?” conference, Department of Political Science, William Paterson University, March 28.

2013 “Climate Change and Conflict in the Global South,” keynote lecture and plenary panel, Peace and Conflict Studies Conference, Utah Valley University, Provo Utah, March 21.

2012 “Climate Violence and Empire,” keynote lecture at Anticipating Climate Disruption: Sustaining Justice, Greening Peace, Peace and Justice Studies, Annual Conference, Tufts University, Cambridge, Mass. October 4-6.

2012 “The Geography of Violence,” keynote, Political Geography Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers, Annual Meeting, Vassar College, Feb. 22. 5 2011 “Reflections on the Internal Politics of the United States,” plenary, Carter Center, Atlanta, GA, Trilateral Media Dialogue: Columbia, United States, Venezuela, June, 14.

2008 “From Attica to Gitmo: The Political Uses of Incarceration in the US,” keynote, Colloquium on the Constitution and the Imagining of America, Amherst College, May.

2008 “Failed States and Climate Change,” keynote at Crime, Justice and War in a World Without Borders Conference, Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, Kentucky, April 15.

2007 “Afghanistan: The Uses and Abuses of a Buffer State,” plenary speaker, 40th Anniversary Meeting of Caucus For A New Political Science, at American Political Science Association Annual Meeting, Chicago, September 2.

INVITED LECTURES

2020 “Climate Crisis in the Age of Bernie,” Democratic Socialists of America, Oakland, CA February 15.

2019 “The Green New Deal,” Panel with David Harvey, The Democracy in Europe Movement 2025, or DiEM25, at The People’s Forum NYC, May 19.

2019 “Storms and the State: How the Political Economy of Government Will Change in the Age of Climate Crisis,” Lebanon Valley College, April 11.

2019 “The Storm State: The Political Economy of Government in the Age of Climate Crisis,” invited lecture, George Mason University, February 14.

2018 “Disaster Sovereign: The Political Economy of Government as an Environment Making Institution," keynote at "People, Politics, and The Environment,” Inaugural Anthropocene Symposium, University of South Florida Tampa, November 2.

2018 “The Current and Future Crisis of Global Climate Refugees,” keynote at Nebraskans For Peace Annual Conference, University of Nebraska at Kearney, September 22.

2018 “Coping with Crisis: Climate Change and Economic Transformation,” invited lecture, University of Virginia, Department of History, February 12.

2018 “Tropic of Chaos Now,” invited lecture, Fordham University, October 30.

2018 “Left Economic Nationalism,” panel at John Jay Economics Department, November 13. 2017 “From the New Mold Belt to Storm Socialism: the Perils and Possibilities of the Climate Crisis,” public lecture, sponsored by East Bay DSA, at Humanist Hall Oakland, CA, September 22.

2016 “Refugees, States, and Climate Change,” invited lecture, Smith College, February 12. 6 2016 “Capitalism in the Web of Life: Author Meets Critics,” presenter and moderator, The New School University Center, 63 Fifth Avenue, New York, February 5.

2015 “Empire of Chaos: Climate Change and the Political Ecology of American Power,” invited lecture, Program On Global Environment, University of Chicago, April 23.

2013 “The Politics of Fossil Fuel Divestment,” invited lecture and debate, Janus Forum and Office of the President, Brown University, October 2.

2013 “Climate Change, Economic Development and Warfare,” invited lecture, United States Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, September 25.

2013 “The Geostrategic and Economic Implications of Climate Change,” invited lecture, World Affairs Council Colorado Springs, September 26.

2013 “The Politics of Climate Change and Violence,” invited lecture, Colorado College Colorado Springs, September 24.

2013 “An Economic History of the State in the context of Climate Change,” invited lecture, Social Justice Speakers series, northern Arizona University, Flagstaff Arizona, April 1.

2012. “Climate Change and the New Geography of Violence,” invited lecture, Department of Geography & Environment, London School Of Economics, London, UK, October 24.

2012 “Political Economy of Climate Violence” invited lecture at Criminology Seminar CUNY Graduate Center, New York City, NY. September 27.

2012 “Mapping the Tropic of Chaos,” The Global Studies Lecture, Worcester State University, April 11.

2012 “Violence and the History of Neoliberalism,” invited lecture, History Department, NYU, February 27.

2011 “Geopolitics of Climate Change,” invited lecture, Woodward Center, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver Canada, December 2.

2011 “The New Era of Climate Wars" 11th annual Dominick S. Graham Lecture on War and Society, The Gregg Centre, University of New Brunswick, Canada, November 24.

2011 “Climate Change and Violence,” invited lecture, World Affairs Council, University of Washington, Seattle, July 12.

2011 “Climate Violence in the Global South,” invited lecture, World Affairs Council of Oregon, Mercy Corps Action Center, Portland Oregon, July, 11.

2011 “Climate Change and Political Violence,” invited lecture at conference structured around Tropic of Chaos, Pocantico Conference Center of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, May, 17-19. 7 2009 “Criminal Justice & Surveillance: From Nixon to Obama," invited lecture, SUNY Old Westbury, November 11.

2009 “Afghanistan Now: A Hundred Year History of War," invited lecture, Sarah Lawrence College, April.

2009 “Water, Politics & War,” invited lecture, Sociology Forum, College of Southern Nevada, March 11.

2008 “The Violent Geography of Global Warming,” invited lecture, Will Miller Memorial Lecture, University of Vermont, April 8.

2008 “Afghanistan and Iraq,” invited lecture, Pitzer College, April 22.

2007 “Understanding the Afghan War,” invited lecture, College of Southern Nevada, Las Vegas, March 7.

2007 “Afghanistan: a View From the Ground,” invited lecture Albertson College, Caldwell, Idaho, March 2.

2007 “Understanding U.S. Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq,” invited lecture, Boise State University, Idaho, March 1.

2006 “Surveillance and Obedience in American History,” invited lecture, Pacific University, Forest Grove, Oregon, November 30.

2006 “Lockdown: The Criminal Justice Buildup,” invited lecture, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, March 14.

2006 “Current Social Movements in Latin America,” invited lecture, Lozano Long Institute for Latin American Studies, University of Texas, Austin, March 6.

2005 “Criminal Justice Since 1968,” invited lecture, College of William and Mary, Virginia, December.

2005 “Understanding the Iraq War,” invited lecture, Public Forum, Community College of Southern Nevada (CCSN) Henderson, NV, November 2.

2005 “Surveillance and Prison,” invited lecture, University of Central Arkansas, October 14.

2005 “Iraq and New Orleans,” invited lecture, Bowdoin College, Maine, November 7.

2002 “Everyday Surveillance from Slavery to the Internet Age,” invited lecture, Washington College, MD, Philosophy Department, April 17.

2002 “Surveillance in America,” invited lecture, Hampshire College, Amherst MA, April.

2002 “Police, Prisons and Surveillance,” invited lecture, Bard College, February.

8 2001 “Race and Class in Lockdown America,” invited lecture, University of California, Berkeley, Ethnic Studies, October.

2001 “Police and Prisons in the Age of Crisis,” invited lecture, Arizona State University, Phoenix, Sociology Department, April.

2001 Public Lecture, “The Long Criminal Justice Buildup,” invited lecture, Webster University, Saint Louis, February.

2000 “The Criminal Justice: From Nixon to Now,” invited lecture, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Prescott, AZ, November.

2000 Public Lecture, “The Long and Lost War on Drugs,” invited lecture, American University of Arizona, Flagstaff, November.

2000 “Police and Prison in California,” invited lecture, University of California, Berkeley, Ethnic Studies Department, November.

2000 “Drug Wars, From Nixon to Clinton,” invited lecture, Northeastern University School of Law, Boston, MA, October.

2000 “The Hidden Uses of Criminal Justice,” invited lecture, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., October.

2000 “Lockdown America,” invited lecture, New York University, New York, October.

2000 “Class and Race in American Justice,” invited lecture, University of Winnipeg, September.

2000 “From Attica to the New Crackdown,” invited lecture, Oberlin College, Ohio, April.

2000 “Political Economy of the Criminal Law,” invited lecture, University of Pennsylvania, Law School, Philadelphia, April.

GRADUATE TEACHING

January 2018 – Present John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Economics Department and International Criminal

MA level Seminars taught: Economics 799 thesis writing seminar

Economic 745 International Political Economy

Economic 760 Political Economy of the Environment

September 2019– December 2019

9 John Jay College Department International Crime and Justice

ICJ 710 Political Economy of Illegal Markets

January 2012 – June 2014 School for International Training, Graduate Institute, Vermont Campus and Washington, DC Center.

MA level Seminars taught:

International Political Economy of Climate Change School for International Training, Vermont campus Spring 2012

Theory and Practice of Sustainable Development, Vermont Campus, Fall Semester 2012.

Food Systems a Political and Environmental History, Vermont Campus, Fall Semester 2012.

Theory and Practice of Sustainable Development, Washington DC Program (bi-weekly intensive meetings) Fall 2012.

Theoretical Foundations of Political Thought, Vermont Campus, Spring 2013.

Food Systems a Political and Environmental History, Vermont Campus, Spring 2013.

Issues in Environmental History and Development, DC Center, Summer 2013.

Theory and Practice of Sustainable Development, Washington DC Program, (bi-weekly intensive meetings) Fall 2013.

Food Systems a Political and Environmental History, SIT Vermont Campus, Spring 2014

MA THESES SUPERVISION

School For International Training, Sustainable Development Program, Vermont Campus and Washington DC Center, supervised, partially supervised, the following students:

Darrick Ryser, “Development and the United Nations” analyzed the UN’s efforts to assist Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States, completed 2014.

Paul Haag, compared social change strategies and outcomes of the nonprofit sector and organized labor, completed 2015.

Reese Joern, analyzed efforts of Mercy Corps to introduce sustainable livestock practices in Tajikistan, completed 2015.

Chiara Boin, analyzed commercial organic farming Texas (in progress).

10 Spencer Fain, researched interaction NGOs and local government in Albanian speaking area of Macedonia, (in progress).

Marissa Markowitz, analyzed women agricultural cooperative efforts to achieve development in Mongolia, completed in DC program September 2013.

Robin Wong , The effectiveness of US government support for Renewable energy and minigrids in Sub-Saharan Africa, completed in DC program September 2014.

Toni Ferre, assessing the relationship between economic development and ethnic conflict in Myanmar, completed in DC program September 2014.

UNDERGRADUATE TEACHING

Fall 2017-Present John Jay College of Criminal Justice, multiple sections ECO 280 Economics of Labor ECO 310 Economics in Historical Perspectives ECO 333 Sustainability: Preserving the Earth as Human Habitat ECO 405 Seminar in Economics

Fall 2014 – Spring 2017 Lecturer, Program in Global Liberal Arts, New York University, Courses:

Social Foundations III: Modernity and its Discontents, 1700 to the present (three sections Fall Semester 2015).

Social Foundations II: environmental and political construction of the modern world, 700 to 1700 (two sections Spring Semester 2015).

Social Foundations III: Modernity and its Discontents, 1700 to the present (one sections Spring Semester 2015).

Social Foundations III: Modernity and its Discontents, 1700 to the present (three sections Fall Semester 2014).

2011 Visiting Assistant Professor, Brooklyn College, NYC, Classes:

Criminology: Justice and Injustice in America (one section)

Introduction to Political Thought (two sections)

2003 – 2006 Research Fellow, CUNY Graduate Center, NYC, Supervised by Neil Smith, Professor of Geography Globalization, Empire, and Warfare.

1998 – 2002 Assistant Professor, Humanities Program, New College of California, San Francisco. 11 Understanding the Social World: Introduction to Social Theory

Political Economy of Incarceration: From Slavery to the Super-Max

The Long 1970s: An International Economic History

San Francisco as Environment

1999- 2000 Adjunct Faculty Department of Sociology and that Anthropology, Saint Mary’s College, Moraga, CA

Urban Sociology (Spring 99)

Social Problems (Fall 2000)

ADMINISTRATION

January 2012 –June 2014

Founding Director, IHP Climate

Climate Change, Food and Energy Program, International Honors Program My role as founding director of the undergraduate study abroad program, International Honors Program’s Climate Course, involved regular visits to Morocco, Bolivia, Vietnam, and California; hiring staff (two in each country); facilitating partnerships with local NGOs and universities; creating experiential curriculum; as well as hiring and supervising teams of traveling adjunct faculty. My administrative duties involve regular coordinating and negotiating with the human resources, technology, publicity, and finance departments of the school for international training. I also interacted regularly with IHP alumni (the program, once stand-alone now part of SIT, is 50 years old and has an active alumni network). In the field and through coordination with my staff, I regularly coordinated and negotiated with educational, non-governmental, and governmental institutions in all four countries we visited.

ACADEMIC GRANTS AND FELLOWSHIPS

Ford Foundation Research Fellow, CUNY Graduate Center, 2003 to 2005 Soros Senior Justice Fellow, Open Society Institute, 2001 to 2003 Visiting Scholar, Humanities Center, University of Minnesota, summer 2003

PROFFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS American Society for Environmental History Association of American Geographers American Historical Association

JOURNALISM

12 Between 2003 and 2010, reported extensively from conflict zones in Iraq and Afghanistan, and various parts of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Wrote dozens of feature stories, essays and reviews on the politics of warfare, crime, state repression, economic justice, energy and climate change for publications including Fortune, , New York Times, London Review of Books, Mother Jones, Playboy and The Nation.

WRITING FELLOWSHIPS

Puffin Writing Fellow, Nation Institute, April 2011- April 2012 Research Fellowship, Rockefeller Brothers Foundation, 2009-2010 Senior Fellow, Demos, 2010 to present Stanley Foundation Reporting Award, 2007 Nation Institute Writing Fellow, 2005 to 2008 Writer in Residence, Blue Mt. Center, Summer 2002 and 2006 Visiting Scholar, Center for International Studies, University of Utah, March 2002 Writer in Residence, Mesa Refuge, Summer 2001 and 2006

EDITORIAL

2007-present. Contributing Editor, The Nation. Write features and editorials; recruit, vet, and edit freelance writers; guest edited 2008 special issue eon change. climat

2002 - present. Contributing Editor, The Brooklyn Rail: Critical Perspective on Arts, Politics and Culture. Write features and reviews, commission and edit work.

AWARDS

The Green Prize for Sustainable Literature, 2012 Emmy Award Nomination, Outstanding Investigative Journalism, 2010 Lange–Taylor Prize, Center for Documentary Studies, Duke, 2009 Best Magazine Writing, SDX Prize, Society of Professional Journalists, 2008 National Council on Crime and Delinquency, PASS Award, “Literature,” 2000 National Council on Crime and Delinquency, PASS Award, “Magazine,” 1998

SELECT ARTICLES SINCE 2001

Le Monde Dipolmatique (English Edition) “Why climate change will make you love big government,” February 2012 “Reading the world in af loa of bread,” August 2011

LA Times op-ed “Make the Big Green Buy,” LA Times, December 19, 2010

Fortune “Chocolate's Bittersweet Economy” Fortune, February 2008

Washington Post 13 “War Stripped of All its Glory,” Washington Post, November 29, 2009 “Throwing Away the Key,” Washington Post, April 8, 2001

London Review of Books “Diary: Afghan Opium Trade,” London Review of Books, 20 January 2005 “Bolivia: Who Owns the Rain," London Review of Books, 7 July 2005

Mother Jones “The Romantic Radical: Bolivia,” Mother Jones, December 26, 2006 “The Bomber of Bamiyan,” Mother Jones May/June 06

New York Times op-ed “Congo's Crisis, Congo's History,” International Herald Tribune, Dec 27, 2007

The Nation “Ecuador’s Paradise lost,” The Nation, August 28, 2013 “Ideology and Electricity: Soviets in Afghanistan,” The Nation, May 7, 2012 “Nuclear Dead End: It's the Economics, Stupid,” The Nation, April 18, 2011 “Pakistan One Year After the Floods,” The Nation, July 18, 2011 “Green Strategy Now,” The Nation December 2, 2010 “A Warning From Japan,” The Nation, April 4, 2011 “Fukushima's Spent Fuel Rods Pose Grave Danger,” The Nation, March 15, 2011 “Nuclear Hubris: Could Japan's Disaster Happen Here? The Nation, March 13, 2011 “The Big Green Buy,” The Nation, August 9, 2010 “Retaking Rio,” The Nation, May 31, 2010 “The Case for EPA Action,” The Nation, May 3, 2010 “The Road to Re-Election Runs Through Kabul?” The Nation, December 7, 2009 “Zombie Nuke Plants,” The Nation, November 19, 2009 “Can China Go Green?” The Nation April 15, 2009 ”Three Mile Island, the NRC and Obama,” The Nation, March 27, 2009 “Limits and Horizons,” The Nation, March 11, 2009 “Class Struggle in the New China,” The Nation, July 30, 2008 “What Nuclear Renaissance?" The Nation, April 24, 2008 “A New Diplomacy for Pakistan,” The Nation, January 4, 2008 “The Fight to Save Congo's Forests,” The Nation, October 22, 2007 “Big Is Beautiful: Green Energy,” The Nation, April 19, 2007 “Who Will Get the Oil, " The Nation, March 1, 2007 “Empire Fall,” The Nation, March 12, 2007 “Iraq Study Group: Defeat With Honor,” The Nation, December 18, 2006 “Taliban Rising,” The Nation, October 30, 2006 “Chaos and Fear Stalk Afghanistan,” The Nation, September 25, 2006 “Letter from Bolivia: Morales Moves,” The Nation, June 19, 2006 “Colombia's Deep Divide,” The Nation, May 25, 2006 “When GI Joe Says No,” The Nation, May 8, 2006 “In the Path of a Storm, Vets Protest a War,” The Nation, May 8, 2006 “Afghanistan: The Other War,” The Nation, March 9, 2006 “Fury Over Foreigners,” The Nation, February 2006, “The Question of Kurdistan,” The Nation, November 14, 2005 “New Orleans: Raze or Rebuild,” The Nation, 26 September 2005 “The Big Easy Dies Hard,” The Nation, 26 September 2005 “Bolivia’s Battle of the Wills,” The Nation, 4 July 2005 “Tear Gas in the Andes,” The Nation, 26 June 2005 14 “Hugo Chávez and Petro Populism,” The Nation, 11 April 2005 “Afghan Poppies Bloom,” The Nation, 24 January 2005 “Who Rules Afghanistan,” The Nation, 15 November 2004 “Postcard from Kabul,” The Nation, 9 October 2004 “What ‘Democracy’ Looks Like,” The Nation, 5 October 2004 “Fables of Reconstruction,” The Nation, 30 October 2004 "The News From Planet Falluja,” The Nation, 5 July 2004 "The Rough Guide to Baghdad,” The Nation, 19 July 2004 “Rebellion in Baquba,” The Nation, 25 June 2004 "A Deserter Speaks,” The Nation, 25 March 2004 “Al Jazeera Goes to Jail,” The Nation, 11 March 2004 “Two Sides: Iraq’s Nasty, Brutish & Long War,” The Nation, 23 February 2004 “Many Peaces, One War,” The Nation, 10 November 2003 “Stretched Thin, Lied to & Mistreated,” The Nation, 6 October 2003 “Postcard from Cancun,” The Nation, 15 September 2003 “Policing the Color Line,” The Nation, 1 October 2001 “Big Brother’s Corporate Cousin,” The Nation, 6 August 2001 “The Drug Coast: Cocaine in West Africa,” Playboy, February 2009 “Our Battles Joined: Murder in Afghanistan, " Playboy, January 2008

Condé Nast Traveler “Feel Good Caribbean: Sustainable Tourism,” Condé Nast Traveler, July 07

California Lawyer “The Outsider: Anthony Romero and the ACLU,” April 2010

The Walrus (Canada) “The Bad Future: Climate Change,” The Walrus, October 31, 2006 “Iraq: Dispatches from the Void,” The Walrus, April 2006

San Diego Union-Tribune “Death Squads: Buried Secrets,” San Diego Union-Tribune, June 8, 2003 “Red Tide: McCarthyism in Twentieth-Century America,” San Diego Union-Tribune, December 14, 2003 Salon “Good morning, Baghdad!” Salon, September 23, 2006 “Prison Rape as a Disciplinary Tactic,” Salon, August 23, 2001

San Francisco Chronicle “Lessons from the Big House,” San Francisco Chronicle, October 22, 2000

Middle East Report “Afghan Wonderland,” Middle East Report, Summer, 2006 “Big Empire, Little Minds,” Middle East Report, Fall, 2012

DOCUMENTARY FILM

Producer and field researcher: Fixer: The Taking of Ajmal Naqshbandi (2009), directed by Ian Olds. This feature length documentary is about the war in Afghanistan.

Fixer won the following honors:

15 Emmy Nomination, Outstanding Investigative Journalism, 2010 Première, Rotterdam International Film Festival, 2009 Best New Documentary Filmmaker, Tribeca Film Festival, 2009 First Prize of the Jury at Documenta Madrid, 2009 University Jury Prize at Pesaro, Italy, 2009 Official selection at more than 20 international film festivals; theatrical release in New York and Los Angeles; aired on HBO as well as on Italian, German and French TV.

Field Producer, on Occupation Dreamland (2005), directed by Ian Olds. Feature length documentary about the 82nd Airborne in Falluja, Iraq. Occupation premièred at Rotterdam Film Festival and South by Southwest, won numerous awards and aired on the Sundance Channel.

Co-producer, Gone Tomorrow (19 min., 2001) documentary on the history of garbage.

Co-producer, Wash Me Vegas (12 min., 1999) documentary on water politics in Nevada.

RADIO JOURNALISM

Radio Producer. Hosted and produced KPFA’s Flashpoints, a news analysis program, three days a week. 1997 to 1998. Freelance Reporter. Sold radio features to Pacifica Radio, several NPR shows, and reported daily news at KPFA and WBAI. Covered prison issues in California, and reported from Guatemala and El Salvador. 1990 to 1994

SELECT TELEVISION APPEARANCES, SINCE 2002

Up with Chris Hayes, MSNBC Martin Bashir, MSNBC Ed Show MSNBC Live with Martin Bashir MSNBC Lehrer News Hour Fox News Bill Moyers Journal Now with David Brancaccio Democracy Now Washington Journal, CSPAN Reuters TV

SELECT RADIO APPEARANCES, SINCE 2002

The World Tonight, BBC World Service Weekend Edition, NPR Politics, BBC The Diane Rehm Show Leonard Lopate Show, WNYC Tavis Smiley Show (national) Public Interest, with Warren Onely (national) On Point, with Tom Ashbrook (national) Forum, with Michael Krasny KQED

16 Rachael Maddow, Air America

LANGUAGE: Spanish, functional fluency

REFERENCES

David Harvey Distinguished Professor The CUNY Graduate Center 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10016-4309 (212) 817-7211 [email protected]

Francis Fox Piven Professor, Department of Social and Political Science The CUNY Graduate Center 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10016-4309 212.817.8674 [email protected]

Adolph L. Reed, Jr. Professor, Department of Political Science University of Pennsylvania 3440 Market Street, Suite 300 Philadelphia, PA 19104-6215 (215) 898-7655 (office) [email protected]

17

Board of Trustees of The City University of New York Committee on Faculty, Staff, and Administration

RESOLUTION TO Transfer Instructional Staff from the Department of Kinesiology to the Departments of Health and Nutrition Sciences, Biology and Secondary Education at Brooklyn College of The City University of New York

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, The Department of Kinesiology at Brooklyn College has had significant departures of personnel and declining enrollments over a number of years; and

WHEREAS, Due to retirements and departures, the Department of Kinesiology now has five (5) faculty members, three of whom are tenured and two of whom are lecturers; and

WHEREAS, The number and rank of faculty has made it increasingly difficult to manage the academic programs associated with the department effectively and in the best interest of students; and

WHEREAS, Based on disciplinary and scholarly fit, faculty expertise, the ability to contribute to the curriculum of the receiving department, and the potential for collaborations with colleagues, Remaining faculty will be transferred to the Departments of Biology, Health and Nutrition Sciences, and Secondary Education; and

WHEREAS, The new departmental appointments were approved by each of the departments; and

WHEREAS, Students will be better served by the transfer of the academic programs to the oversight of other departments; and

WHEREAS, Brooklyn College has consulted with its faculty through its governance body at its Policy Council meeting held April 28, 2021 and they fully endorse the decision to close the Department of Kinesiology and transfer the remaining faculty to other departments within Brooklyn College; and WHEREAS, Pursuant to Section 6122 of the New York State Education Law, seniority of tenured persons is governed by the date of appointment to the department; and

WHEREAS, Tenured persons transferred and appointed effective the same date to the new department shall have the same date of seniority as a result of these transfers; and

WHEREAS, The Brooklyn College President, therefore, shall break these ties in seniority between and among the tenured members by using each member’s original date of appointment to his or her first full-time instructional staff title at the college; and

WHEREAS, At such time as the untenured faculty member may become tenured, her seniority would be governed by the date of appointment to the new department and the President will apply the same tie-breaking principle; and

WHEREAS, Each impacted instructional staff member has been advised of his/her seniority date in the new department.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

RESOLVED, That the five (5) current Brooklyn College faculty in the closing Department of Kinesiology, listed herein, be transferred to the Departments of Biology, Health and Nutrition Sciences, and Secondary Education as indicated below.

AND BE IT FURTHER

RESOLVED, That this faculty action is contingent upon the approval of the closing of the Department of Kinesiology by the Committee on Academic Policy, Programs and Research effective August 25, 2021.

Below is the list of faculty to be transferred:

College Current Former New Seniority Appointment Name Rank Tenure Department New Department Date Date

Dunbar, Christopher Professor Yes Kinesiology Biology 08/25/21 09/01/1990

Associate Health and Leung, Raymond W. Professor Yes Kinesiology Nutrition Sciences 08/25/21 09/01/2007

Associate Secondary Zeng, Howard Professor Yes Kinesiology Education 08/25/21 09/01/2003

Health and Cai, Patricia Lecturer CCE Kinesiology Nutrition Sciences 08/25/21 08/27/2014 Health and Geraghty, Brian Lecturer CCE Kinesiology Nutrition Sciences 08/25/21 08/27/2012

EXPLANATION:

Brooklyn College’s academic administration worked with department chairs of the receiving departments and faculty of the transferring department to find the best intellectual and academic fit for each faculty member and the programs in which they teach. The new departmental appointments were approved by each of the departments.

Board of Trustees of The City University of New York

RESOLUTION TO Extend The Period of the Chancellor’s Emergency Relief Fund to June 30, 2022

June 7, 2021

WHEREAS, The Board of Trustees of The City University of New York (the “University”) established the Chancellor’s Emergency Relief Fund by resolution on March 30, 2020, to provide financial assistance and support to University students in the greatest need across the University’s 25 campuses during the economic crisis triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic; and

WHEREAS, The Board of Trustees voted on October 26, 2020, to extended the period of the Chancellor’s Emergency Fund to June 30, 2021; and

WHEREAS, A large portion of the University’s student population is economically vulnerable in the best of times and is even more vulnerable during the ongoing public health crisis; and

WHEREAS, The Chancellor’s Emergency Relief Fund has raised more than $10 million, distributed $6.3 million to more than 12,000 students in need, and will distribute the remainding funds by the end of 2021-2022 academic year; and

WHEREAS, The recipients include students who (i) have a family income profile of high need (zero family contribution on their financial aid packages); (ii) are within 12 credits of completing their degree; (iii) are student parents; (iv) are undocumented students; (v) are students in foster care; (vi) had owed fees and debts to the University that prevented from them from registering for classes; and/or (vii) are international students who are ineligible to receive state or federal assistance including relief from the CARES Act; and

WHEREAS, The University anticipates there will be continuing need for additional student financial assistance and support in the 2021-2022 Academic Year due to the continuing economic crisis resulting from COVID-19 pandemic; and

WHEREAS, The Chancellor is authorized to (i) solicit pledges for the Chancellor’s Emergency Fund of up to $15 Million and (ii) accept individual donations up to and including $1,000,000 for the Chancellor’s Emergency Fund, on or before June 30, 2021; and

WHEREAS, There continues to be keen public and private interest in donating and pledging to the Chancellor’s Emergency Relief Fund.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT

RESOLVED, That the Board of Trustees hereby approves the extension of the period of the Chancellor’s Emergency Relief Fund from June 30, 2021 to June 30, 2022; and

BE IT, FURTHER

RESOLVED, That, in accordance with Board of Trustees Policy 3.05 - Trust and Gift Funds, Acceptance and Administration, the Chancellor shall continue to maintain a separate bank account designated for this specific purpose; and

BE IT, FURTHER

RESOLVED, That the Chancellor be, and hereby is authorized to solicit pledges of up to $20 Million, on or before June 30, 2022 and it being understood that any funds pledged by a donor should be reported monthly to the Board of Trustees; and

BE IT, FURTHER

RESOLVED, That the Chancellor be, and is hereby authorized to accept individual donations up to and including $1,000,000 prior to June 30, 2022, and be it understood that this authorization shall continue to supersede Board of Trustees Policy 3.05 - Trust and Gift Funds, Acceptance and Administration up and until, June 30, 2022, and such donations shall be subject to a post audit and shall be reported to the Board of Trustees on a weekly basis; and

BE IT, FURTHER

RESOLVED, That any donation of more than $1,000,000 shall require the approval of the Board of Trustees or its Executive Committee in accordance with Policy 3.05 - Trust and Gift Funds, Acceptance and Administration, including all audit and reporting requirements; and

BE IT, FURTHER

RESOLVED, That in addition to the report required July 15, 2021, the Chancellor shall provide to the Board of Trustees by July 15, 2022 a report of all expenditures made through June 30, 2022.

EXPLANATION: Given the unprecedented and enduring public health and economic crisis posed by the COVID-19 pandemic and the severe impact it has had on our community, the University recommends the continuation of the Chancellor’s Emergency Relief Fund as a means to mitigate the financial impact on our students. There is still interest from potential funders and our students’ needs will no doubt continue through June 2022.